|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
9 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best of the best,
By HM29 (Arizona) - See all my reviews
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
There is a lot to like about this book. One, there is helpful, specific practical information on how to create a "hiring pool" to have better employees. Two, there is revolutionary thinking about "de-hiring." This sounds like a synonym for "firing" but it isn't... it's a new way to think about employees and how to motivate them to be top performers or motivate them to find a place where they can be (working elsewhere). Finally, the book is clever and witty. Dauten is a syndicated newspaper columnist, and his writing style is personal and warm. Don't be fooled by the light touch and humor -- this is a book that is both deeply philosophical and immediately practical. It's the employment equivalent of Good To Great.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another gem by Dale Dauten,
By
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
This book is one I recommend that every manager (or anyone aspiring to become a manager) read and study. Dauten focuses on a much-neglected topic -- the advantage of promoting healthy turnover and improving the performance of direct reports by ensuring that every employee produces results at an acceptable level.
Firing a terrible employee is a no-brainer. Dauten explores a more difficult and common problem, handling a long-term underachiever. He advocates a method of "de-hiring" in these situations. Allowing employees to produce mediocre work indefinitely does not help the company, the manager, or the employee. Dauten advises that managers set quantifiable objectives that represent an appropriate level of performance, and not a minimum standard. If the employee understands that meeting this level of performance is a condition of employment, he will either rise to the occasion, try and fail to meet the standards and leave voluntarily, or understand better when terminated. This approach treats the employee with dignity, provides an opportunity for improved performance, and establishes clear expectations for the future. This book is a quick read. Yet it contains principles that I continue to reference when coaching dozens of managers in the automotive retail industry.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Required Reading for Enlightened Bosses,
By Scott Ryan Jones "Global Sales & Marketing Le... (Atlanta, Georgia USA) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
One of many great books by Dale Dauten, '(Great) Employees Only...' is a very approachable text on how gifted leaders attract superstars and redirect those that will never be. I've successfully used Dauten's approach to both hire superstars and 'dehire' underachieving team members to our mutual benefit. '(Great) Employees Only...' is required reading for my existing and aspiring managers and has been consistently well received. Highly recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Master of the Anecdote,
By
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
Dale Dauten is a master of the anecdote that perfectly supports the often counter-intuitive hiring practices this wonderful book proposes. You can read it front-to-end or jump in anywhere. The book is divided into dozens of bite-size pearls, each of which can easily rate a book by itself, yet in Dauten's expert hands, each becomes a meal in itself. Check out the story from Southwest Airlines about the employee who quits because she "can't stand to be happy all the time." That's an example of organic dehiring. A takeaway for me is that change starts with a willingess to abandon cherished but unworkable assumptions. The temptation when we don't make progress is to blame "them." Dauten's answer is that focusing on "those people" is doomed to failure. Like it or not there is really only one way to create change and that is by the example we set by our own transformation. So the question, "how do you get them to change?" becomes an interrogation with oneself. This books is an indispensible guide to start some of those difficult interrogations.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Authors Only,
By
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
This had more ideas than any business book I've read in the past few years (and I've read plenty of yawners in that mix). It was a quick read, while being clever and often funny. As good as his earlier book "The Gifted Boss," "Great Employees Only" maintains Dauten's status as "The Boss" of business consulting.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Closer to 3.5 stars,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
GEO was easy to read and kept my interest. The sections on hiring and de-hiring were informative and had some good ideas. As the book progresses though the ideas become very familiar, as if you have read them before (which you most likely have if you are a regular business book reader). I noticed that I highlighted less and less as the book went on. I had listened to a one-hour synopsis of the book which motivated me to buy it, but I didn't get a whole lot more from reading it in its entirety. I think a young executive or manager would benefit greatly from some of the ideas. I am happy that I read GEO, but it wasn't a blockbuster.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Art of Getting Better,
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
This book is broken into dozens of observations, insights and case studies that any manager will learn from. I particularly benefited from the sections on "noboby wants to be managed," creating "hiring pools" and on "de-hiring." If everyone read and followed the de-hiring process, the world would be a better place and there would be a lot more happy employees and productive workplaces.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointed,
By Kaire Varrak "Kaire" (Estonia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
This book was not up to my expectations. Maybe I understood this introduction wrong- I hoped to find some hints to find great employees and some new ideas. Instead I read many times, that it is important to hire great employees and that they are not easy to find. To my opininon it is more like a childrens book, than for the adults. I am not a manager, but I read nothing new, instead I understood, that we are doing things ok already in our company. In real world things are not so easy and simple as in this book. At least not in Estonia, people are bit smarter. Some of the titles in this book were longer that the chapters itself, I was lucky to get one good sentence per chapter.
2 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dautens Diamonds,
This review is from: (Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success (Hardcover)
Another diamond from Dale Dauten. Simply a must read for anyone living, creating, and functioning in todays business world.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
(Great) Employees Only: How Gifted Bosses Hire and De-Hire Their Way to Success by Dale Dauten (Hardcover - September 18, 2006)
$21.95
In Stock | ||