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High Performance With High Integrity (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo)
W. Ben

High Performance With High Integrity (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo) (Memo To The Ceo)

Harvard Business School Press (May 28, 2008)
#77
9781422122952
| Hardcover
125 pages | 122 x 188 mm | English
Dewey 174.4
LC Classification HF5387 .H445 2008
LC Control No. 2008003057

Subject

  • Boards Of Directors
  • Business Ethics
  • Chief Executive Officers
  • Corporate Governance
  • Organizational Effectiveness

Plot

The Memo to the CEO seriesoffers short, practical books from world-class thinkers on the burning issues at the top of executives' agendas. Authored by the foremost experts in the field and published under the Harvard brand, these books are different from traditional books in the business category because they are written in the form of a "memo"and only 100 pages in length. Highly readable, engaging, and solutions-oriented, these "memos" provide senior level executives and decision makers with provocative insights and top advice on topics of special urgency pertaining to business, organisations, and organisational life. Timely and authoritative,Memo to the CEObooks are ideal for time-starved and information-overloaded executives who seek the best advice from the best thinkers.GE's long-time general counsel, Ben Heineman, highlights how General Electric and other top organisations have built cultures that fuse high performance with high integrity through a series of core principles and key practices designed to ensure that employees do the right thing. Changes in laws, regulations, regulators, stakeholder expectations, and media scrutiny over the past decade can make a major integrity miss catastrophic. Fines and penalties, for example, now are counted in hundreds of millions of dollars compared to single or double digit millions a decade ago-"or, worse, a company can simply implode. As a top advisor to both Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt, Heineman (now a distinguished fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School) offers a detailed analysis of what GE did right-"and not so perfectly-"and argues that governance reforms focusing almost exclusively on corporate boards have missed the point. The most important governance question, and the real imperative for companies, is how the CEO and other company leaders build an organic culture that fuses high performance with high integrity at all levels of the company-"in a challenging, fast-changing, and, at times, hostile world.The book offers a stark picture of the current environment; provides a framework of core principles and practices; gives wise advice on specific problems and challenges; and articulates a fresh new view of boards and governance for the 21st century. This book will serve as both a wake-up call and blueprint for companies around the world on how to avoid integrity landmines and achieve enduring success in a transparent and volatile world.

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Added Date Jun 22, 2012 19:46:14
Modified Date Jun 22, 2012 19:46:14