The Marxist prediction that capitalist bureaucracy must inevitably neutralise individualistic leadership in industry, has been disproved over and over by the careers of industrial 'superstars' from Andrew Carnegie to Henry Ford, Lee Iacocca, Estee Lauder, and David Rockerfeller - all of whom could be described as having made their own personal stamp on their respective businesses. Arguing that personality can also affect the departure styles of retiring CEOs, Sonnenfeld defines four principle types: Monarchs, Generals, Ambassadors, and Governors. The personality of each type is outlined in interviews with real-life business leaders and illustrated with numerous pithy anecdotes, making The Hero's Farewell both a well-researched and an entertaining read.
The Marxist prediction that capitalist bureaucracy must inevitably neutralise individualistic leadership in industry, has been disproved over and over by the careers of industrial 'superstars' from Andrew Carnegie to Henry Ford, Lee Iacocca, Estee Lauder, and David Rockerfeller - all of whom could be described as having made their own personal stamp on their respective businesses. Arguing that personality can also affect the departure styles of retiring CEOs, Sonnenfeld defines four principle types: Monarchs, Generals, Ambassadors, and Governors. The personality of each type is outlined in interviews with real-life business leaders and illustrated with numerous pithy anecdotes, making The Hero's Farewell both a well-researched and an entertaining read.
Jeffery Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Harvard Business School for
the past decade, is now Professor of Organization and Management
and Director of the Center for Leadership and Career Change at
Emory University. He has twice won the Academy of Management's
annual award for outstanding research on social issues, and was
named to their Board of Governors in 1988. He is the author of
three other books, including Managing Career Systems, and
numerous articles on executive careers.
"A thoughtful account of the transition that high-powered CEOs
confront as they consider retirement."--Chicago Tribune
"Intriguing exploration of succession strategies."--H.A. Raymond,
University of South Dakota
"Excellent--thoughtful, well-documented, rich material,
well-written. An important contribution."--Lynne Rosansky, Babson
College
"Excellent book on what makes the CEO tick. The scholarship is
sound, and the conclusions are convincing."--F.M. Buchanan,
Salisbury State University
"Excellent--covers a very intriguing topic which all managers must
deal with."--Lanny A, Karus, State University of New York,
Oswego
"A shrewd management study."--Newsweek
"Sonnenfeld presents an original theory, based on five years of
research and interviews with fifty top executives, to explain both
the psyches and the departure styles of CEOs. He offers frank,
revealing profiles of individual business leaders and how they
left....A pathbreaking achievement. Sonnenfeld's research is
innovative and substantive, his material is soundly organized, and
he presents it with skill and flair. The book deserves to be read
widely, both
by business people and by others who want insights into what's
happening in corporate America."--The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Sonnenfeld has provided a valuable service, as well as an
interesting study, by showing through examples that the method by
which a CEO exits a firm can be as important to the company as the
method by which that same chief executive led it."--The Miami
Herald
"[Sonnenfeld] has succeeded--and succeeded brilliantly--in what he
set out to do....One of the best business books of the past year,
perhaps of the decade....[The Hero's Farewell] has something of
real value to say about management and, more important, about
leadership. The volume is filled with fascinating stories from
inside corporate boardrooms, but these stories never fall into mere
anecdotalism: they always make or confirm an important point.
It
is challenging. It is highly recommended."--The Toronto Globe and
Mail
"This is a fascinating book, not least for what it has to say about
the nature of leadership and the complex psychology of those who
achieve it....A welcome change from the breathless
simple-mindedness of so many of the management best-sellers of
recent years."--Financial Times (London)
"Replete with examples of post-leadership fulfillment, often
through activities that involve continued leadership outside the
corporate context....The Hero's Farewell offers a thoughtful and
humanistic study of a side of the CEO that has parallels for
all."--Harvard Business School Bulletin
"In this fascinating and informed look at management
succession...Sonnenfeld explores the sense of emptiness and
insignificance that retiring CEOs feel....One of those rare
business books that informs as well as engages."--Business Week
"Wide-ranging....Absorbing."--Kirkus Reviews
"Fascinating."--Forbes Magazine
"A clever, thoughtful exposition on the retirement patterns of
CEOs....Sonnenfeld has created an entertaining game of identifying
useful stereotypes: once you learn them, you can apply them to
every leader you know."--The Atlantic
"This is a book about everybody who works....Sonnenfeld's views
into these privileged private lives are filled with compassion and
insight....It is rare for a book to provide absorbing biography,
compelling social commentary, critical historical observation, or
vital personal counsel. The Hero's Farewell does all of this and
does it well."--Fortune Magazine
"A pathbreaking achievement....Deserves to be read widely, both by
business people and by others who want insights into what's
happening in corporate America."--The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Engrossing....Not pretentious or bookish, this work ranges
captivatingly over much received wisdom and research concerning
late-career phenomena and contributes its own new results and
stimulating leads."--Choice
"A creative, innovative work--an act of leadership in
itself."--James MacGregor Burns, Williams College
"An insightful and imaginative book exploring an important but
hidden side of leadership....Sonnenfeld's in-depth account is a
model analysis of how the human and strategic sides of business are
connected."--Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Harvard Business School
"Fascinating....I'm sure the book will be a great success."--Alfred
G. Goldstein, President, Sears Specialty Retailing
"A fine piece of work and beautiful writing. It's well-crafted,
very solid in terms of theory, literature, and original data, and
written with much heart."--Douglas T. Hall, Boston University
"A super book--very well written."--Walter Trosin, Senior Vice
President, Human Resources, Merck & Co.
"A very comprehensive work which has broken new ground. I don't
know of any other volume that has given attention to top management
retirement....This should get a warm reception and a good deal of
applause."--Harry Levinson, The Levinson Institute
"Each time I read over this book, I come away more excited and
informed....Marvelous stuff--and writing."--Warren Bennis,
University of Southern California
"Most interesting and analogous to what happens to U.S. Presidents
even before they retire."--James David Barber, Duke University
"Interesting and readable....Systematic, precise, cautious, and
learned."--Roger Brown, Harvard University
"Each time I read over this book, I come away more excited and
informed....Marvelous stuff and writing."--Warren Bennis,
University of Southern California
"A monumental accomplishment. Sonnenfeld has done what he set out
to do--describe that half of executive succession that no one has
examined."--Academy of Management Executive
"Extremely well documented....It is surprisingly free of technical,
academic writing, yet it retains an authoritative, scholarly
respectability."--Business Book Review
"This book is written about a timely and relevant topic, the
author's inferences are reasoned, and the writing style is
riveting."--Academy of Management Review
"Day-long interviews with 50 prominent retired CEOs yield
insightful, richly described examples of each exit style....
Sonnenfeld's use of quotes and anecdotes bring to life the unique
problems founders face when exiting the firms they created.
Throughout these chapters, revelations by the CEOs about the events
and politics surrounding their departures as well as their own
tumultuous feelings are poignantly captured in Sonnenfeld's
engaging writing
style."--Journal of Management
"A thoughtful account of the transition that high-powered CEOs confront as they consider retirement."--Chicago Tribune "Intriguing exploration of succession strategies."--H.A. Raymond, University of South Dakota "Excellent--thoughtful, well-documented, rich material, well-written. An important contribution."--Lynne Rosansky, Babson College "Excellent book on what makes the CEO tick. The scholarship is sound, and the conclusions are convincing."--F.M. Buchanan, Salisbury State University "Excellent--covers a very intriguing topic which all managers must deal with."--Lanny A, Karus, State University of New York, Oswego "A shrewd management study."--Newsweek "Sonnenfeld presents an original theory, based on five years of research and interviews with fifty top executives, to explain both the psyches and the departure styles of CEOs. He offers frank, revealing profiles of individual business leaders and how they left....A pathbreaking achievement. Sonnenfeld's research is innovative and substantive, his material is soundly organized, and he presents it with skill and flair. The book deserves to be read widely, both by business people and by others who want insights into what's happening in corporate America."--The Philadelphia Inquirer "Sonnenfeld has provided a valuable service, as well as an interesting study, by showing through examples that the method by which a CEO exits a firm can be as important to the company as the method by which that same chief executive led it."--The Miami Herald "[Sonnenfeld] has succeeded--and succeeded brilliantly--in what he set out to do....One of the best business books of the past year, perhaps of the decade....[The Hero's Farewell] has something of real value to say about management and, more important, about leadership. The volume is filled with fascinating stories from inside corporate boardrooms, but these stories never fall into mere anecdotalism: they always make or confirm an important point. It is challenging. It is highly recommended."--The Toronto Globe and Mail "This is a fascinating book, not least for what it has to say about the nature of leadership and the complex psychology of those who achieve it....A welcome change from the breathless simple-mindedness of so many of the management best-sellers of recent years."--Financial Times (London) "Replete with examples of post-leadership fulfillment, often through activities that involve continued leadership outside the corporate context....The Hero's Farewell offers a thoughtful and humanistic study of a side of the CEO that has parallels for all."--Harvard Business School Bulletin "In this fascinating and informed look at management succession...Sonnenfeld explores the sense of emptiness and insignificance that retiring CEOs feel....One of those rare business books that informs as well as engages."--Business Week "Wide-ranging....Absorbing."--Kirkus Reviews "Fascinating."--Forbes Magazine "A clever, thoughtful exposition on the retirement patterns of CEOs....Sonnenfeld has created an entertaining game of identifying useful stereotypes: once you learn them, you can apply them to every leader you know."--The Atlantic "This is a book about everybody who works....Sonnenfeld's views into these privileged private lives are filled with compassion and insight....It is rare for a book to provide absorbing biography, compelling social commentary, critical historical observation, or vital personal counsel. The Hero's Farewell does all of this and does it well."--Fortune Magazine "A pathbreaking achievement....Deserves to be read widely, both by business people and by others who want insights into what's happening in corporate America."--The Philadelphia Inquirer "Engrossing....Not pretentious or bookish, this work ranges captivatingly over much received wisdom and research concerning late-career phenomena and contributes its own new results and stimulating leads."--Choice "A creative, innovative work--an act of leadership in itself."--James MacGregor Burns, Williams College "An insightful and imaginative book exploring an important but hidden side of leadership....Sonnenfeld's in-depth account is a model analysis of how the human and strategic sides of business are connected."--Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Harvard Business School "Fascinating....I'm sure the book will be a great success."--Alfred G. Goldstein, President, Sears Specialty Retailing "A fine piece of work and beautiful writing. It's well-crafted, very solid in terms of theory, literature, and original data, and written with much heart."--Douglas T. Hall, Boston University "A super book--very well written."--Walter Trosin, Senior Vice President, Human Resources, Merck & Co. "A very comprehensive work which has broken new ground. I don't know of any other volume that has given attention to top management retirement....This should get a warm reception and a good deal of applause."--Harry Levinson, The Levinson Institute "Each time I read over this book, I come away more excited and informed....Marvelous stuff--and writing."--Warren Bennis, University of Southern California "Most interesting and analogous to what happens to U.S. Presidents even before they retire."--James David Barber, Duke University "Interesting and readable....Systematic, precise, cautious, and learned."--Roger Brown, Harvard University "Each time I read over this book, I come away more excited and informed....Marvelous stuff and writing."--Warren Bennis, University of Southern California "A monumental accomplishment. Sonnenfeld has done what he set out to do--describe that half of executive succession that no one has examined."--Academy of Management Executive "Extremely well documented....It is surprisingly free of technical, academic writing, yet it retains an authoritative, scholarly respectability."--Business Book Review "This book is written about a timely and relevant topic, the author's inferences are reasoned, and the writing style is riveting."--Academy of Management Review "Day-long interviews with 50 prominent retired CEOs yield insightful, richly described examples of each exit style.... Sonnenfeld's use of quotes and anecdotes bring to life the unique problems founders face when exiting the firms they created. Throughout these chapters, revelations by the CEOs about the events and politics surrounding their departures as well as their own tumultuous feelings are poignantly captured in Sonnenfeld's engaging writing style."--Journal of Management
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