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Corporation on a Tightrope: Balancing Leadership, Governance, and Technology in an Age of Complexity [Hardcover]

John G. Sifonis (Author), Beverly Goldberg (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

May 23, 1996
Business is no longer business as usual. The global market is in constant flux, as some nations come together, other fall apart, trading blocs emerge, and formerly closed doors reopen. At home, leadership roles and organizational structure have seen a sea change, with the vertically integrated, tightly knit organization seemingly headed for oblivion. And the changes keep happening faster and faster. For a firm to succeed in this highly complex environment, executives need a better understanding of the deep philosophic and extensive physical adaptations needed to reshape and prepare their company for an uncertain future. To provide this deeper understanding, John G. Sifonis, a business consultant, and Beverly Goldberg, a think tank executive, who together have decades of hands-on experience, visited dozens of companies, conducted numerous interviews, and then traveled to the Sante Fe Institute, to discuss their conclusions about practical applications of complexity theory to business. The result of their study is Corporation on a Tightrope, a brilliant blend of complexity theory and hard-earned business sense, that will help executives lead their organizations into the highly uncertain future.
Sifonis and Goldberg show that the flexible organization of the future will be a complex adaptive system that responds to the effects of market-driven changes on its three critical components--governance, technology, and leadership. It will be an organization capable of self-renewal, constantly reshaping itself to seize opportunities as they emerge and quickly shrink when the market changes yet again. To help executives create this flexible firm, the authors provide seven practical tools, principles that when carefully put in place create a solid foundation for the future--an organization must set unwavering ethical standards; establish a social contract; maintain a lean organization based on core competencies; develop leadership skills at every level; be open to learning, encourage experimentation, and be innovative; avoid restructuring when it should be regoverning; and ensure connectivity. The authors illustrate each of these principles with fascinating examples taken from actual corporations, such as the ethical dilemma faced by Levi's, whose move overseas brought up the problem of lost American jobs and foreign child labor; the innovative arrangement between insurance company Allmerica Financial and DST Systems, a developer of automated business solutions; and the leadership of executives such as Herb Kelleher of Southwest Airlines, who projects enthusiasm and friendliness to the media, and has his workforce reflect the same image. Readers will find other instructive anecdotes on companies such as Boeing, Texas Instruments, Shell, and Intel.
Spiced with pithy quotations from prominent executives and business experts such as Peter Drucker, Edward Filene, Charles Handy, and Sam Walton, plus top people at Johnson & Johnson, Unilever, and other major corporations, this is a sweeping, visionary book that will transform the way business leaders take their companies into the future.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

The corporate shape of the future is the butterfly, with its flexible complexity and quick-changing nature. To be successful, companies must engage in continual change in the areas of governance, technology, and leadership. Sifonis and Goldberg (Dynamic Planning: The Art of Managing Beyond Tomorrow, LJ 4/15/94) include seven principles of balance to help companies position themselves between stability and disorder. These include setting ethical standards, establishing a social contract with workers, and being open to learning and innovation. Organizational change is a popular topic among business writers (e.g., Fast Forward, LJ 3/15/96, edited by James Champy and Nitin Nohria); what makes this work unique is its emphasis on business ethics and continual worker training for all employees, whether temporary or permanent. Recommended for public and academic libraries.?Kathy Shimpock-Vieweg, Muchmore & Wallwork Lib., Phoenix
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Sifonis and Goldberg include seven principles of balance to help companies position themselves between stability and disorder.... What makes this work unique is its emphasis on business ethics and continual worker training for all employees."--Library Journal

"Concepts drawn from the life sciences and the developing sciences of complexity seem destined to find uses in the business world. Corporation on a Tightrope provides a coherent and lively beginning for this important discussion. It deserves a wide readership."--Stuart Kauffman, a member of the Sante Fe Institute and author of At Home in the Universe

"Corporation on a Tightrope is a rich compendium of some of the most interesting and useful insights about organizations and their leadership. It's a guide to the twenty-first century and addresses the question of how organizations and leaders must respond to the complexity, connectivity, and changes now unfolding. Miss reading this at your own peril."--Warren Bennis, Distinguished Professor of Business Administration, USC, and author of On Becoming a Leader and An Invented Life

"Corporation on a Tightrope presents unique insights into how modern concepts of leadership and organization can be fitted together, how understanding within the company can be developed and attitudes changed. This important and readable book provides new and practical ways to achieve success in today's global economy."--P. Michael Pitfield, Vice Chairman, Power Corporation of Canada

"Sifonis and Goldberg have done a masterful job of putting into perspective some of the most daunting challenges facing leaders and managers in today's highly complex, dynamic, and fluid business environment.... The "Principles of Balance" developed by the authors based on their research and experiences are compellingly logical and should be embraced by everyone who seeks to attain success through corporate organizations."--Mark L. Hazelwood, President and C.E.O., ARCO Pipe Line Company

"Corporation on a Tightrope is a restructuring 'cookbook,' one that should be required reading for the chief engineer for change in every business. The increasingly competitive global marketplace of today and the foreseeable future demands flexibility and responsive, decisive strategies. The lessons of success presented in this book can help the visionaries of today to be the leaders of tomorrow."--Charles F. Goff, Chairman and C.E.O., Destec Energy, Inc.

"Here's a strong case for concurrent corporate excellence in governance, technology, and leadership; Sifonis and Goldberg thus define the 21st-Century standards for managerial performance. Elevating.--Management General Top 10 Management Books of 1996

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; First Edition edition (May 23, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195093259
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195093254
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,605,194 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Average tenture for a CIO is three to five years. Why?, April 18, 2008
By 
Golden Lion "Reader" (North Ogden, Ut United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Corporation on a Tightrope: Balancing Leadership, Governance, and Technology in an Age of Complexity (Hardcover)
1. The technology leader of tomorrow must be a businessperson first, with all the leadership and people skills of any other senior executive.

2. In 1991, a study by Deloitte & Touche reported the average tenure of a CIO was three years and that almost one-third of all corporate CIO unwilling depart from their posts. In 1995, Computer Science Corp reported tenure of five years.

3. A ComputerWorld survey of Fortune 1,000 CEO found that 64% doubted the value of their IT investment. Among the reasons for this negative perception was failure to understand governance, strategic misalignment, lack of proper communication, unrealistic expectations, the failure to bring new technologies into the organization in a timely fashion, lack of innovative uses of technology, and a misunderstanding of how costs and how value should be accessed.

4. Strategic Alignment Modeling starts from the premise that every change made in the business strategy affects the business structure, the IT strategy, and the IT infrastructure.

5. Many CIOs, fail to make clear the gains from using technology to automate a process.

6. CIOs face the difficulty of delivering applications on time and within budget.

7. Businesses look to technology leaders to be the prime movers in the use of technology, which is why technology leaders need to avoid personal attachment to a specific system. These leaders are determined to protect what they are familiar with and to maintain the control that a large, single system provides - that they ignore all recommendations for change.

8. Among the most frequently heard complaints about CIOs is that they promise improvements from new technologies that simply do not materialize.

9. Senior management approves cost of new technology based on gains in productivity over a five-year period and that business volume by providing customers with efficient, high quality service.

10. Divisional Information Officer establishes a structure where the CIO works closely with senior management. This is done so the units could each find the best business solution for their IT needs- developing their own systems, or contracting with either outsourcers or the corporate IS group producing coherency of vision, maximizing buying power, using best-practices, and not sacrificing long-term viability by adopting short term strategies.

11. InformationWeek suggest that IT personnel are too important to be bottled up in any single part of the company. It should be divided into four primary functions: data services, building applications, strategic planning, and enforcement of the rules through the executives of the organization.

12. The CIO may have the power to take away any business unit's IT franchise if they do not adhere to the principles established by the governing coordinating body.

13. CIO reveal in a 251 market survey that 96 percent can predict information expeditures, occupancy costs, head count capacity and price/performance for the next three years. They often are signing nine-year outsourcing contracts. CIOs have no way to measuring their needs and costs for the outsourcing project.

14. A strong, small core IT group is necessary to develop and manage the outsourcing arrangement, and to build new arrangements if those in place break down.

15. At companies such as IBM, Xerox, Kodak, and Merrill Lynch, recent CIOs have been fast-track executives with records of managing important non-technological aspects of the business.

16. The IT group must be prepared to grow, which means switching to open systems that can expand in far smaller increments
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
butterfly organization, affinity workers, ethical governance, operational governance, boundary manager, federalist model, butterfly form, strategic governance, centralist model, core employees, information technology function, information technology group
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The Good Leader, Building Multilevel Leadership, Silicon Valley, The Seven Principles of Balance, Constructing the New Organization, Pattern of Trust, Enhancing the Role of the Board, The Art of Accommodation, Sun Microsystems, New York, Information Age, General Motors, Levi Strauss, Asea Brown Boveri, Industrial Age, British Petroleum, Shell Oil Company, Order Out of Complexity, United States, General Electric, Peter Drucker, Destec Energy, Total Quality Management, Federal Express
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