![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgTDDJ01o1aKPKn4zNnNqyb_owp1b5HdqfU27bnVL1JzAZy9Sg5wP2t1dS8j8ZSmCnzZB-AfHQRogCsbO5km-GEHdj7UFpU-R57cOheYNOLDaOMP8S0vnvsYPVEGnXsgeijcWp/s200/185.jpg)
- Soft-pedaling your drive to achieve results, tending instead to avoid making decisions that might damage your ego or reputation;
- Wanting to be liked by peers and direct reports (It is lonely at the top, isn't it?), therefore shying away from holding them accountable;
- Hesitating to take decisive action, (and/or hold direct reports accountable), until more information is in hand. In a world of imperfect and ever-shifting information, the CEO can project vague and hesitant direction to his/her reports, at the risk of paralysis;
- Restricting "productive ideological conflict" among the management team during decision-making, a temptation motivated by a desire for harmony and/or a fear of conflict; and,
- Overtly or unconsciously portraying himself/herself as invulnerable, discouraging direct reports from challenging his/her ideas, in turn preventing the foundation of trust that can steady an organization through hard times.
Gracias Ivo por la recomendación!
1 comentario:
Martín,
Muy bueno el blog! Y muy buena esta nota.
Saludos,
Sergio Villagra
Publicar un comentario