Synopses & Reviews
Project teams are the rule rather than the exception in today's organizations. But thanks to the pressure of performance goals, conflicting agendas, and political jockeying, few teams make superior decisions consistently. Instead, team members communicate poorly or not at all, avoid provocative discussion, occasionally stab each other in the back, or in many other ways forget that their job is to make decisions that lead the company forward. Jana Kemp, an authority on team decision making, saves the day by offering tested methods and tools team members and their leaders can use to ratchet up the performance level. That not only makes team projects more successful--it makes work fun.
Review
"How many of the meetings you attend do you consider worthless? Your response (and those from the rest of your colleagues) will no doubt lead you to read, if not embrace, Kemp's latest book….She touts a rubric called ChoiceMarks, which is a typology of five styles--antisurvival, boxed-in, neutral, engaged enthusiasm, extreme excitement-all of which can somehow lead to decisions being made. Scenarios, practices, quizzes, and lists upon lists of questions infuse these styles with substance and help readers figure out how to become unstuck, collaborate, take control, act, or simply let the initiative die. The material is presented in a realistic, down-to-earth manner…." - Booklist
Review
As Jana Kemp shows in Moving Out of the Box, there's a time for consensus, and a time for command and controland a time to integrate both approaches. Her practical tools, honed through application in groups of all types and sizes, ensure that team members have the know-how to make effective decisions that have an impact on an organization's results. Providing examples of successes and failures, as well as interactive and diagnostic exercises, she identifies five decision-making profiles, and shows how to steer your group into the most effective one.
The five profiles:
· Anti-survival. The naysayers have control. Surprisingly, sometimes they should be listened to.
· Boxed-in. When no one can come up with fresh ideas, it's time to think out of the box.
· Neutral. Nobody terribly excited or negative? Don't worry, sometimes this isn't a bad place to be to make a good decision.
· Engaged enthusiasm. If you can get the team into this attitude, chances are that a good decision will result and follow-through will occur.
· Extreme excitement. Most teams leaders think this is where the team needs to be to make a good decision. It's nice, but not required.
Each profile or group dynamic is well defined and includes scenarios, exercises, quizzes, sample questions, and other conversation starters. The book ends with a blueprint for putting decisions into action. All in all, this handbook will help improve group and individual communication, problem solving, decision making, and execution, regardless of the task at hand.
"How many of the meetings you attend do you consider worthless? Your response (and those from the rest of your colleagues) will no doubt lead you to read, if not embrace, Kemp's latest book....She touts a rubric called ChoiceMarks, which is a typology of five styles--antisurvival, boxed-in, neutral, engaged enthusiasm, extreme excitement-all of which can somehow lead to decisions being made. Scenarios, practices, quizzes, and lists upon lists of questions infuse these styles with substance and help readers figure out how to become unstuck, collaborate, take control, act, or simply let the initiative die. The material is presented in a realistic, down-to-earth manner...."Booklist
Synopsis
As Jana Kemp shows in
Moving Out of the Box, there's a time for consensus, and a time for command and control—and a time to integrate both approaches. Her practical tools, honed through application in groups of all types and sizes, ensure that team members have the know-how to make effective decisions that have an impact on an organization's results. Providing examples of successes and failures, as well as interactive and diagnostic exercises, she identifies five decision-making profiles, and shows how to steer your group into the most effective one.
The five profiles:
• Anti-survival. The naysayers have control. Surprisingly, sometimes they should be listened to.
• Boxed-in. When no one can come up with fresh ideas, it's time to think out of the box.
• Neutral. Nobody terribly excited or negative? Don't worry, sometimes this isn't a bad place to be to make a good decision.
• Engaged enthusiasm. If you can get the team into this attitude, chances are that a good decision will result and follow-through will occur.
• Extreme excitement. Most teams leaders think this is where the team needs to be to make a good decision. It's nice, but not required.
Each profile or group dynamic is well defined and includes scenarios, exercises, quizzes, sample questions, and other conversation starters. The book ends with a blueprint for putting decisions into action. All in all, this handbook will help improve group and individual communication, problem solving, decision making, and execution, regardless of the task at hand.
Synopsis
A veteran author and consultant shows how teams and team leaders can improve communication, make better decisions, and reach goals more effectively, quickly, and productively.