
Managers
Personality and Performance
Richard B. Lee(Editor)
AldineTransaction (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 15. March 2007
Book
Paperback/Softback
192 pages
978-0-202-30940-8 (ISBN)
Description
What makes people go into business? What makes some businessmen--and some businesses--outstandingly successful, while others, with opportunities just as good, fail? These questions are often asked, and have often been studied from the point of view of economics or of organizational theory. This book is one of the first scientific studies to probe these questions in depth, in terms both of the individual business manager's character, personality, and drives, and of the group psychology of his milieu.
Starting with a descriptive survey of an important and homogeneous European industry, it traces a clear pattern of success and failure among the firms operating in it. Then, using as a basis the transcript of more than 600 interviews with executives of the firms concerned, it seeks the reasons for each firm's position.
The results are startling: in both the successful and the unsuccessful companies remarkably consistent personality patterns emerge. The study demonstrates that individuals seek to fulfill themselves in their daily work. It shows that in the successful companies there is a basic harmony between the actual job done and its symbolic value for the individual, while in the less successful companies there is strain and tension of a particularly disharmonious kind. The executives' conscious purposes are often at odds with their unconscious needs.
Rogers does not seek to minimize the importance of objective external factors. But his study of top management suggests reasons why an environment that spells success for some firms spells disaster in others. This is a fascinating and important book, which will be read with profit both by businessmen and by social scientists.
Starting with a descriptive survey of an important and homogeneous European industry, it traces a clear pattern of success and failure among the firms operating in it. Then, using as a basis the transcript of more than 600 interviews with executives of the firms concerned, it seeks the reasons for each firm's position.
The results are startling: in both the successful and the unsuccessful companies remarkably consistent personality patterns emerge. The study demonstrates that individuals seek to fulfill themselves in their daily work. It shows that in the successful companies there is a basic harmony between the actual job done and its symbolic value for the individual, while in the less successful companies there is strain and tension of a particularly disharmonious kind. The executives' conscious purposes are often at odds with their unconscious needs.
Rogers does not seek to minimize the importance of objective external factors. But his study of top management suggests reasons why an environment that spells success for some firms spells disaster in others. This is a fascinating and important book, which will be read with profit both by businessmen and by social scientists.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Somerset
United States
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Inc
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
294 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-202-30940-8 (9780202309408)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
07/2017
1st Edition
Routledge
€215.41
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Person
Kenn Rogers was for many years engaged in business, both in the U.S., and in Europe, and he has, in his approach to his subject, successfully combined the viewpoints of a social scientist and of a practical man of affairs. He spent many years in industry, first in textile marketing and later as the purchasing officer of a large institutional organization. He was for two years a lecturer at Glacier Institute of Management in Ruisslip, England and then became Associate Professor of Psychology at Nassau Community College, Garden City, New York as well as a consultant to research and industrial organizations.
Content
I: What this book is about; II: The research opportunity; III: Significant features of the household product market; 34: The non-leader companies; V: Universal; VI: The case of the Davidson Company; VII: Successful and non-leader companies - a comparison of attitudes; VIII: Final Implications of this study; IX: What has happened since