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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A model for Servant Leadership
I am Servant Leadership Specialist in a Catholic Hospital setting in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. This health care campus is part of a 12 Hospital system. My short comments are premised upon a retreat in Vancouver with the authors for five days, their highly useful work with our staff of 600 on site a year ago, and my experience as an Ethicist and teacher of theology...
Published on April 28, 2000 by Rev. William Jablonske

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26 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Proof that the Ideological State Apparatus is alive and well
Rich in religious and philosophical anecdotes, Izzo and Klein's attempts to apply the "common thread" behind the world's great religions to the revitalization of the corporate culture sadly misses the mark. Building upon the Zen Buddhist tradition of focused and deliberate physical labor (pp. 12-13,) the book lays out a systematic plan for the revival of...
Published on August 29, 1999 by Carl Stahmer


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26 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Proof that the Ideological State Apparatus is alive and well, August 29, 1999
Rich in religious and philosophical anecdotes, Izzo and Klein's attempts to apply the "common thread" behind the world's great religions to the revitalization of the corporate culture sadly misses the mark. Building upon the Zen Buddhist tradition of focused and deliberate physical labor (pp. 12-13,) the book lays out a systematic plan for the revival of both the corporate and the individual soul via the building of real work-communities.

Recognizing that the corporation can no longer provide to its employees the type of financial reward nor security that it once did, the book seeks to answer the question of how managers can elicit loyalty and commitment from their workers when the corporation offers neither loyalty nor commitment in return. Not surprisingly, Izzo and Klein's attempts to answer this question mimic historically dominant responses to the dilemma-sell them a philosophy.

As Napoleon once astutely noted, "You can't buy a man's life, but he'll give it to you for a medal." _Awakening Corporate Soul_ is a medal for the modern corporate employee. It offers the chance to participate in a perverted version of ancient wisdom as the payoff for selling one's soul to the corporation.

The "Path" that Izzo and Klein present appears enlightened and appealing: Attend to your work; Shed the victim mindset; Speak the truth; Attention to detail; Avoid distractedness-all valuable insights. However, in their re-telling of the Buddhist work-myth (the focus of the master on his simple tasks) in the context of corporate culture, Izzo and Klein overlook one of its most important tenets-the work must be only for itself. The Zen master does not achieve enlightenment by counting the number of pieces of wood that he has gathered at the end of the day (or by counting the harvest of his pupils) but by finally admitting to himself that the count is meaningless. Corporate culture simply cannot do this, because it is antithetical to its ethos; and Izzo and Klein certainly do not suggest it as a management strategy.

The modern corporation will never give its employees the time that they need to achieve enlightenment through labor because, as the man says, "Time is money." As such, Izzo and Klein's attempt to suggest that the key to the path of enlightenment through labor lies in the pocket of the individual and not in the safe of the corporation is disingenuous at best. It is true that "the soul wants to shine through us and illuminate our work and work-places;" (5) but it is unfair to place on individual workers or managers the burden of responsibility for allowing the soul to shine through. It can never be true, as Izzo and Klein suggest, that "the awakening of the Corporate Soul begins with the individual," (8) so long as the goal of the corporation is profit through the extraction of surplus labor value.

"I loafe and Invite my soul,/ I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass" (Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass). These are the conditions of enlightenment, not the competitive and over-productive world of the trans-national corporation. The relationship between labor and the corporation will always be alienated because in the depths of their souls all workers know that the corporation's primary concern is not with their well-being, but with the profit that the corporation can extract from them. The soul is not repressed in the modern corporation because our management strategies are poor; it is repressed because it tells the secrets of our exploitation.

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A model for Servant Leadership, April 28, 2000
By 
Rev. William Jablonske (Stone Lake, Wisconsin 54876) - See all my reviews
I am Servant Leadership Specialist in a Catholic Hospital setting in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. This health care campus is part of a 12 Hospital system. My short comments are premised upon a retreat in Vancouver with the authors for five days, their highly useful work with our staff of 600 on site a year ago, and my experience as an Ethicist and teacher of theology.

A reviewer suugested that this book's premise is yet another medal given to those who sell themselves to the institution. But this is not true: the outcome of using these thoughts and the assumptions of Servant Leadership (Robert Greenleaf Center, Indianapolis, Indiana} helps the colleagues in a really growth enhanceing environment take ownership of the relationships and policies in their own setting. If the effort is made in good faith by all, the result is a workplace that is peaceful, friendly, cooperative, and above all productive. I strongly recommend the principles developed by Klein and Izzo. They flow from their deep exprience with several of America's best and largest corporations, from their own humanity and from the most thoughtful consideration they have given to creating truly humanizing and productive workplaces.

I offer a word of caution however: if you still believe that just another set of words and ideas can give you a new result, this approach would be no more than just another 'canned program'. When you decide to recreate your workplace on honest relationships, not power, and want to create a new work system that has both power and peace, then you are ready to begin the long-term effort of rebuilding the world of work in which you live. This is a guidebook for those who have the idea of a better way to work and live. This small book is not a panacea; it is a map for a long journey. We have invested 9 years in this effort in our health care setting, and both patients and staff know and happily acknowledge that with persistence, we are growing into what is envisioned here.

A practical note: We are now at the point of attracting people who think in this manner into our most responsible administrative and service areas and we have many very long term employees. People love to work where they known, respected and part of the decision making process. We have had great and competent help from Klein and Izzo in creating a caring corporation, and in incorporating our own Christian values and Catholic traditions.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Corporate Soul's a Great Help, April 25, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Awakening Corporate Soul: Four Paths to Unleash the Power of People at Work (Paperback)
Having read Corporate Soul a while ago,I am really quite surprised by how much I continue to refer to it and be inspired by it in my work in higher ed administration. The four paths to corporate soul outlined in the book are thought-provoking. They provide a good way to organize one's thinking about how to bring greater meaning to one's work and that of coworkers. The book is also full of good stories from spiritual traditions, which are worth the read in their own right. Finally, the book is practical enough to convince a reader (well, me at least) that one can actually do something about this stuff and not just feel good about it.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An important message for the 21st Century, April 22, 2000
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This book is an important and useful look into what is possible in the business world when we enter the normally forbidden territory of "corporate soul". I have been involved as a CEO of medium-sized companies, have spent 6 years putting together a $100million Aquarium project, and am now involved in teaching Servant Leadership and consulting. The only way to open up our organizations to what is possible, to create workplaces and a world we all want to live in, is to begin NOW the conversation Eric Klein and John Izzo have so boldly, so passionately called us to. Their book not only calls us in to this critical conversation, but gives us specific pathways in which to begin the movement towards a culture of belonging and purpose, in other words, one of soul.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring Corporate Soul, May 26, 2000
What a timely and inspiring book. It's a practical and profound guide on how to nurture and develop the spirit at work. I particularly benefitted from the exercises and tools for implementation.

It's not easy to distill the wisdom of great spiritual teachers and make engaging and relevant examples of how to apply that wisdom at work. I highly recommend this book - whether you work for a company or not.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book, October 21, 2003
By 
Manta (Baltimore, MD United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Awakening Corporate Soul: Four Paths to Unleash the Power of People at Work (Paperback)
This is a great book. Though I personally look at my Christian beliefs as workplace inspiration, I like hearing more holistic points of view. This book does a nice job of balancing eastern and western philosophy and religion in its view of work. It is a very positive book and realistic. This book is not pretentious like most spirituality in business books.

I enjoyed reading the book and hope these two authors write followup books on this same subject.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awakening the Corporate Soul by Eric Klein and John Izzo, September 9, 2005
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This review is from: Awakening Corporate Soul: Four Paths to Unleash the Power of People at Work (Paperback)
Book arrived in perfect condition at a significant savings. Our agency is adopting the 100/0 philosophy--100% responsibility/0 excuses, found in this book. I am very happy to be able to recommend this seller to our staff and your buyers.
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