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The Powers to Lead 1st Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 24 ratings

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What qualities make a leader succeed in business or politics? In an era when the information revolution has dramatically changed the playing field, when old organizational hierarchies have given way to fluid networks of contacts, and when mistrust of leaders is on the rise, our ideas about leadership are clearly due for redefinition.

With
The Powers to Lead, Joseph S. Nye offers a sweeping look at the nature of leadership in today's world, in an illuminating blend of history, business case studies, psychological research, and more. As he observes, many now believe that the more authoritarian and coercive forms of leadership--the hard power approaches of earlier military-industrial eras--have been largely supplanted in postindustrial societies by soft power approaches that seek to attract, inspire, and persuade rather than dictate. Nye argues, however, that the most effective leaders are actually those who combine hard and soft power skills in proportions that vary with different situations. He calls this smart power. Drawing examples from the careers of leaders as disparate as Gandhi, Churchill, Lee Iacocca, and George W. Bush, Nye uses the concept of smart power to shed light on such topics as leadership types and skills, the needs and demands of followers, and the nature of good and bad leadership in terms of both ethics and effectiveness. In one particularly instructive chapter, he looks in depth at contextual intelligence--the ability to understand changing environments, capitalize on trends, and use the flow of events to implement strategies.

Thoroughly grounded in the real world, rich in both analysis and anecdote,
The Powers to Lead is sure to become a modern classic, a concise and lucid work applicable to every field, from small businesses and nonprofit organizations to nations on the world stage. This paperback edition includes a new preface by the author.
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4.7 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2024
    The book is well written and the concepts are most useful for a senior executive in any organisation.
  • Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2019
    great book
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2011
    Author, statesman, university dean and agency director Joseph S. Nye Jr. has led - and has closely observed leadership - from the highest levels. His earlier writings forged the theory of "soft power" to denote persuasive leadership. In this book, Nye traces leadership lessons from Sun-Tzu to George W. Bush, citing historical events and their impact over the span of centuries. He defines which qualities mark successful and failed leaders. Nye's writing style is dense, and almost every sentence is a thesis. You may find yourself holding a page open with a fingertip as you gaze up from the book, digesting all that Nye conveys and applying his illustrative lessons to whatever dilemmas you might face as a leader or a follower. And to Nye - as he makes clear - everyone is usually both. getAbstract recommends Nye's compelling insights to CEOs, executives and managers who want to become more effective leaders, to anyone who aspires to lead, and to everyone who needs to learn the art of following.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2013
    I finished this only because it was a required text for a class. Horrendous. The pseudo-scientific jargon is bad enough. But add to that example after example drawn from war and the military ranks. Real leaders would no doubt run screaming away from this book.
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2010
    Leadership through persuasion and influence is the path favoured by leaders who use soft power to manage. A long-standing advocate of soft power, Joseph Nye, points out, in The Powers To Lead, that soft power is just one way to manage. The book recommends the use of smart power.
    Success is obtained with smart power by combining hard and soft power skills in varying proportions, depending on the situation. Leadership with soft power transforms group members through the use of attraction, inspiration, persuasion, and charisma.
    Hard power was used more by managers in prior eras of the industrial age. These leaders wanted to dominate their followers. They got what they wanted through coercion, bullying, and appealing to their opponents' tangible interests with rewards that had conditions attached.
    Leaders who are better at using smart power have contextual intelligence. They know when to use soft or hard power to inspire their followers since they are aware of the distribution of power in their organization, its cultural values, and changes in their followers needs. Hard power is more appropriate when there is a need to appeal to tangible interests; whereas, soft power is effective when a leader can appeal to higher order values and noble purposes.
    For example, when bargaining over wages, soft power is a good route to follow in a political nonprofit group where people work due to their own personal values. On the other hand, hard power bargaining, where tangible rewards are doled out, is likely necessary in a corporate for-profit setting where workers perceive that the owner is rich.
    There are many examples in The Powers To Lead that are based on the author's experiences and observations in the public sector and international politics. The author, Joseph Nye, has experience as a professor, and former dean, of Harvard's School of Government, and as a senior official in two US presidential administrations.
    Nye expands the scope of The Powers To Lead, so that it encompasses the use of smart power by all leaders, by including examples from the private sector. The examples from the private sector point to the need for increasing the use of soft power in business. One CEO in information technology notes that he would be kicked off the island if he used the hard power methods of management like those of Jack Welch of GE fame. Joseph Nye points out that only half the managers who were trained in hard power systems, like that at GE, went on to be successful leaders elsewhere. Nye also discusses managers who transfer between the public and private sectors and how some of them continue to be successful in their new endeavours.
    The closing chapter of The Powers To Lead examines the morality of leaders who use smart power. Joseph Nye favours the use of soft power in the contemporary times since he feels that soft power is the best path to choose in a world which has a highly educated workforce, the spreading of democratic principles, and followers who need to perceive that they are making their own decisions. On the other hand, Nye feels it is morally right for a leader to use hard power when necessary.
    Many other reviewers are also pleased to see The Powers To Lead written by a world class scholar, Joseph Nye. The book adds to our knowledge about leadership and brings together thinking from the public and private sectors. Some reviewers would like the book to include a more concrete action plan for leaders. As it is, political junkies can probably find Nye's opinions about their heroes. All reviewers agree that The Powers To Lead is an excellent, concise, contemporary treatise on the appropriate use of power by leaders.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2009
    I had hoped that the silliness of "soft power" would be contained in political science. Surely the mature disciplines of leadership and management theory would be spared Joseph Nye's prose. What of McGregor's "Theory X and Theory Y," the Management Grid of Blake and Mouton, Karl Weick's Social-Psychology of Organizing, and the collective works of Drucker? Does Abraham Maslow ring a bell? Humanistic theory? Matrix management? Addled by years of "soft academic living" at Harvard, has Nye forgotten how to do a literature search?

    Enough! Do you think we walk the halls of academe, like mindless zombies, muttering "Command & Control...?" Joe! We've been there and done that! Please, leave us alone!

    "If you cut us, do we not bleed?" Ouch! An Emeritus from the English Department just hummed a copy of The Merchant of Venice at me, muttering: "Don't send him our way! He'll write a book about "Smart Shakespeare." But as famous Notre Dame coach once said, "Nobody, but nobody comes into our house and pushes us around!" No, we're not gonna take it!

    Shades of the 1960's! I wake to a nightmare of angry sociologists and cultural anthropologists waving their dissertations and pitchforks in the hall, shouting "Yankee go home!" (He was from Harvard, you know. Maybe that explains it.) But it is not a dream. Nye has struck again, jumping disciplines like an academe pandemic. I can hear mocking laughter from the Political Science Department: "See! See what we have had to put up with?!!" Indeed! Misery does love company! The man has no shame. What's next, "soft fusion?" Take cover Gell-Mann, I hear he's gunning for a Nobel in physics. Ha! You laugh! "Do not ask for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee." Ouch! That Emeritus should be pitching for St. Louis!
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Chaimaa
    5.0 out of 5 stars Must read
    Reviewed in Canada on November 19, 2020
  • SO
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 8, 2014
    Not finished yet but it is promising