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Results from the Heart: How Mini-Company Management Captures Everyone's Talents and Helps Them Find Meaning and Purpose at Work
 
 
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Results from the Heart: How Mini-Company Management Captures Everyone's Talents and Helps Them Find Meaning and Purpose at Work [Hardcover]

Kiyoshi Suzaki (Author), His Holiness the Dalai Lama (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 1, 2002
Results from the Heart "introduces a new and helpful approach to improving job performance, improving job satisfaction, and helping organizations better respond to the rapid changes that are an inherent part of today's business environment. Mr. Suzaki recognizes that a motivated and engaged workforce should be part of any strategy to obtain and maintain competitive advantage."

--Carl Stern, CEO,
The Boston Consulting Group


Since the publication of Frederick Taylor's "The Principles of Scientific Management," managers have relied on logic to compel action. Now Kiyoshi Suzaki, one of the world's leading experts on enlarging the talents, self-esteem, and growth of the individual employee, argues that logic alone cannot move people to act. Productivity problems are inextricably linked to self-esteem, he argues, and worst of all to a prodigious waste of individual talent. But each solution is personal, Suzaki concludes, and found only within ourselves.

"To find meaning and purpose at work we must use our brain," Suzaki says, "but listen to our heart." In Zenlike fashion he proposes that each of us ask ourselves a series of questions to determine the degree to which our brain is engaged with our heart. The framework around which this selfquestioning takes place is a groundbreaking concept that Suzaki calls "the mini-company." The author demonstrates how, within the larger workplace, each job is endowed with an almost spiritual meaning when each person -- at every level -- becomes president of his or her own area of responsibility. With simple diagrams, Suzaki shows how your boss becomes your banker or venture capitalist and your peers become your immediate suppliersor customers. The results are nothing short of astonishing. In "Results from the Heart," Suzaki describes thousands of mini-companies he has "founded" during his worldwide consulting assignments. In most cases in which unhappy employees had previously "followed instructions like robots," there have been spectacular increases in both morale and productivity. If it is true that work is a journey, this manifesto for a more humane definition of the way we work is the roadmap.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

As proposed by Kiyoshi Suzaki, a "mini-company" is a new kind of internal structure within a larger business, managed like an individual but interconnected corporation and designed for both personal and organizational advancement. Suzaki, a worldwide manufacturing consultant and author of several previous books, fully defines the concept in Results from the Heart and shows how it can have positive impacts on employees and ultimately contribute to their success and their company's. The purpose, as he sees it, is to "go beyond just doing our work routinely. We need a fresh and lively new paradigm to continuously find purpose in what we do." This is achieved with his model, Suzaki argues, because it allows workers on all levels to make meaningful contributions in the areas over which they have responsibility. He explains how those in any department can create and operate one of these entities, from developing its mission and orchestrating its implementation to summarizing its progress and acknowledging its contributions. The idea may not appeal to everyone, but Suzaki contends it has already proven effective and he provides enough detail here for anyone interested in giving it a try. --Howard Rothman

From Publishers Weekly

Suzaki, a manufacturing consultant (The New Manufacturing Challenge), believes that all companies, regardless of size, need to be divided into smaller operations in order to be successful. "Mini-companies" not only foster greater productivity and fulfillment among employees but also allow management to maximize resources in all departments, thereby leading to a more dynamic business. To illustrate his point, Suzaki discusses several hypothetical companies and the structural changes they make that allow for these new divisions. For example, he cites one company that chronically complains to its financers, and another that is well organized internally. Although he believes that every company can use this method, the author acknowledges that it is difficult, particularly for some micromanaging executives, to delegate responsibility and authority to many people at different levels of the company. In such cases, Suzaki suggests a trial period. He is convinced that "mini-companies" are essential to fostering happiness among workers and greater success overall for the company. Callous, hard-nosed CEOs are not likely to adapt this touchy-feely theory (they may balk at phrases like "Whether we are running a mini-company or cleaning an office, if we practice what our heart desires I have no doubt that our actions will lead to a life well lived"), especially since Suzaki does not use actual companies as examples. However, Suzaki's book is well organized and written clearly enough that employees from lower ranks through executive boardroom will find it useful.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press; 1st edition (January 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743215508
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743215503
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #459,261 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dalai Lama's foreword, October 23, 2004
This review is from: Results from the Heart: How Mini-Company Management Captures Everyone's Talents and Helps Them Find Meaning and Purpose at Work (Hardcover)
Taken from the Dalai Lama's foreword:

"I believe we have both the ability and the means to solve our problems and improve our world. Perhaps, the most important factors that inhibit us are short-sightedness, narrow-mindedness, and selfishness. Yet, to look after yourself is not wrong. Without a strong sense of self, we cannot develop self-confidence, determination, and will power.

But we must be careful, for there is also a narrow minded selfishness that can lead to self-destruction. To counter that we have to realize that in reality our own interest is closely linked to the interests of others and the benefit, happiness, and interests of others are our own."

The idea of mini-company is as simple as that! But there may be a deep gap between spirituality and business... I wonder.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Total Productive Maintenance Small Groups Taken to the Next Level, May 21, 2007
This review is from: Results from the Heart: How Mini-Company Management Captures Everyone's Talents and Helps Them Find Meaning and Purpose at Work (Hardcover)
I was exposed to Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) throughout the late nineties, therefore the concept of small groups (inherent to the way TPM works) was familiar to me. In "Results from the Heart", Kiyoshi Suzaki, an author of many titles on the famous Japanese manufacturing framework, introduces the concept of Mini-Companies as an extension of the concept of Small Groups.

The tools and components he presents for the internal functioning of Mini-Companies and their interaction with other Mini-Companies across the organization give new life to the concept. This is the true value of the book.

As for the connection of the TPM concepts to finding meaning and purpose at work, the book seems a bit of a stretch, barely touching on the topic. If you really want to read about this, I recommend you try Z.B.A.: Zen of Business Administration - How Zen Practice Can Transform Your Work And Your Life.
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