The Effective Executive – Peter Drucker

The Effective Executive – Peter Drucker

Gold advice on leadership and decision-making.

Brilliance Vs Hard Work

Brilliant men are often strikingly ineffectual; they fail to realize that brilliant insight is not by itself an achievement.

They never learned that insights become effective only through hard, systematic work.

Intelligence, imagination, and knowledge are essential resources, but only effectiveness converts them into results. By themselves, they only set limits to what can be achieved.

Managing Time

Time is the most valuable resource, as one can hire great people but cannot rent, hire, buy or obtain more time.

The Team Contribution

To ask, “What can I contribute?” is to look for the unused potential in the job. And what is considered excellent performance in many positions is often but a pale shadow of the job’s full potential of contribution.

Every organization needs performance in three major areas: It needs direct results; building of values and their reaffirmation; and building and developing people for tomorrow.

Secrets Of Effectiveness

The one secret to effectiveness is concentration. Effective executives do first things first, and they do one thing at a time.

They are then able to “do so many things,” apparently including many difficult ones. They do only one at a time. 

Effective executives do not race. They set an easy pace but kept going steadily.

The Universal Incompetent

What seems to be wanted is universal genius, and universal genius has always been in scarce supply. The human race’s experience strongly suggests that the only person in plentiful supply is the universally incompetent.

Therefore, we have to staff our organizations with people who, at their best, excel in one of these abilities.

Learning Effectiveness

One can be an effective executive by:

Five Habits Of The Effective Executive

  1. Effective executives are time-oriented.
  2. Effective executives focus on outward contribution and results rather than effort.
  3. Effective executives build on strengths— their own strengths, the strengths of their superiors, colleagues, and subordinates; and on the strengths in the situation.
  4.  Effective executives concentrate on the few major areas where superior performance will produce outstanding results.
  5. Effective executives, finally, make effective decisions. They know that this is, above all, a matter of system— of the right steps in the right sequence.

The First Step

The first step toward executive effectiveness is to track actual time spent.

Systematic time management is therefore the next logical step.

One has to find nonproductive, time-wasting activities and get rid of them if one possibly can.

This requires asking oneself a number of diagnostic questions.

 

Effective executives have learned to ask systematically and without coyness, “What do I do that wastes your time without contributing to your effectiveness?” To ask this question and to ask it without being afraid of the truth is a mark of an effective executive.

Effectiveness: Better Results

If one cannot increase the supply of a resource, one must increase its yield. And effectiveness is the one tool to make the resources of ability and knowledge yield more and better results.

Knowledge work is not defined by quantity. Neither is knowledge work defined by its costs. Knowledge work is defined by its results.

The Flow Of Events

If the executive lets the flow of events determine what he does, what he works on, and what he takes seriously, he will fritter himself away simply “operating.” He may be excellent, but he is certain to waste his knowledge and ability and throw away what little effectiveness he might have achieved.

He always, at the end of his meetings, goes back to the opening statement and relates the final conclusions to the original intent.

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