Dear HBR:

Ineffective Leaders


Listen Later

Does your organization lack quality leadership? Dan and Alison answer your questions with the help of Peter Bregman, a leadership expert. They talk through what to do when your leaders are indecisive, unprofessional, or value the wrong things.

From Alison and Dan’s reading list:

HBR: If Your Boss Could Do Your Job, You’re More Likely to Be Happy at Work by Benjamin Artz, Amanda Goodall, and Andrew J. Oswald — “Although we found that many factors can matter for happiness at work – type of occupation, level of education, tenure, and industry are also significant, for instance – they don’t even come close to mattering as much as the boss’s technical competence. Moreover, we saw that when employees stayed in the same job but got a new boss, if the new boss was technically competent, the employees’ job satisfaction subsequently rose.”

HBR: Great Leaders Are Confident, Connected, Committed, and Courageous by Peter Bregman — “No matter your age, your role, your position, your title, your profession, or your status, to get your most important work done, you have to have hard conversations, create accountability, and inspire action.”

HBR: Find the Reverse Leaders in Your Midst by Scott Edinger — “Reverse leaders lead through influence, not authority, and they gain that influence by making strong interpersonal connections. To do that they must be self-aware enough to understand the effect their words and actions have on other people. As more and more knowledge work requires people to work effectively with peers, the example of the way these people treat their team members becomes increasingly important to organizational effectiveness for all leaders, formal and informal.”

HBR: What You Can Do If You Have a Gossiping Boss by Joseph Grenny — “And finally, gossip is, by definition, a notoriously inaccurate source of social data. The most accurate judgments about others’ motives, competence, or actions are judgments that have been exposed to broad and open examination. Dialogue is the best vehicle for establishing social truths; gossip protects its messages from this kind of scrupulous examination. There is no integrity in a process with no accountability.”

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Dear HBR:By Harvard Business Review

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

742 ratings


More shows like Dear HBR:

View all
Hidden Brain by Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam

Hidden Brain

43,592 Listeners

TED Talks Daily by TED

TED Talks Daily

11,163 Listeners

The McKinsey Podcast by McKinsey & Company

The McKinsey Podcast

383 Listeners

The Look & Sound of Leadership by Essential Communications - Tom Henschel

The Look & Sound of Leadership

1,168 Listeners

HBR IdeaCast by Harvard Business Review

HBR IdeaCast

151 Listeners

Cold Call by HBR Presents / Brian Kenny

Cold Call

196 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

113,458 Listeners

Up First from NPR by NPR

Up First from NPR

56,968 Listeners

Women at Work by Harvard Business Review

Women at Work

1,383 Listeners

Dateline NBC by NBC News

Dateline NBC

47,424 Listeners

Think Fast Talk Smart: Communication Techniques by Matt Abrahams, Think Fast Talk Smart

Think Fast Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

821 Listeners

Coaching Real Leaders by Harvard Business Review / Muriel Wilkins

Coaching Real Leaders

672 Listeners

Listening Time: English Practice by Sonoro |  Conner Pe

Listening Time: English Practice

530 Listeners

HBR On Strategy by Harvard Business Review

HBR On Strategy

81 Listeners

HBR On Leadership by Harvard Business Review

HBR On Leadership

168 Listeners

New Here by Harvard Business Review

New Here

82 Listeners

Frozen Bedtime Stories by Help Me Sleep!

Frozen Bedtime Stories

580 Listeners