Following up with yesterday´s email on Leadership, here you have got this excellent IESE insight´s post on management and the inmportance of people:
 
How Good Executives Manage: 15 Success Stories
Llopis Casellas, Jaume; Ricart Costa, Joan Enric
 
 
Publisher:  Pearson Educación
Original document: Qué hacen los buenos directivos
Year: 2012
Language: Spanish
 
 
The  travails of the average workday mean that important questions like "What  are our goals?" or "How do we want to compete?" get put on the back  burner. This weakens executives' ability to rise up and meet the  challenges facing their companies. 
But there are ways of incorporating a forward-looking vision into  day-to-day tasks, as a new book by IESE professors Jaume Llopis and Joan  E. Ricart reveals. 
The book shares the stories of 15 top executives from Coca-Cola,  Codorníu, Ficosa, Fnac, Ikea, ING, "la Caixa", La Fageda, LVMH, Merck,  Microsoft, Nestlé, Telefónica, Unilever and Vodafone.
Their stories contain common threads that the authors have also observed in their studies of 200 other executives.
The executives give three issues top priority: the business model, the future and people. 
Executives are no longer just strategists who seek to compete and gain  value through suppliers, clients, society and employees. Their  portfolios have become much broader, and to manage well, they need to  have a clear list of priorities.
Envisioning the Future
To prepare their companies for the long haul, senior executives  need to know their business inside-out and envision a future for  themselves. 
Kim Faura of Telefónica recommends three tactics: Be aware of the value  of time, know how to multitask and be organized. "I only answer the  phone between 12 and 1," he says. 
To know their business, executives agree they must reach out to clients in order to get to know their concerns and needs. 
They must also have a feel for what the competition is up to.  Competitors should be viewed as a mirror, not to imitate, but as a way  of gauging oneself. 
Differentiation is essential, but without falling into the trap of price  wars. Standing out from the competition must permeate the entire  company and be embraced in all processes and training programs, beyond  R&D.
While companies certainly need a clear strategy to keep them focused,  Laura González Molero of Merck reminds readers that one must never  forget that the world is in a constant state of flux, so they have to  keep reinventing themselves in anticipation of arising scenarios.
Managing People
All of the executives agreed that companies must create an  organizational environment that encourages the development of people:  creating strong teams, training, retention and anticipating future  personnel needs.
Rosa García, a former Microsoft executive who is now president of  Siemens Spain, sees her role as a trainer capable of identifying the  best talent, assigning people to the right jobs, facilitating their  training, and demanding results.
Peter Betzel of Ikea says that he prefers a team of strong-willed  people, even if they are conflict-prone and tough to lead, because the  results "are always better." 
Corporate leaders have to create the right challenges for their  executives, encourage them to take risks and teach them to deal with  failure. In measuring results, they should give credit where credit is  due for a good performance. 
Above all, a good leader must know how to delegate, a skill that is not  at all commonplace. It requires being able to define responsibilities  clearly, create the right teams and then allow those teams to get on  with their work, making their own decisions and at times making their  own mistakes. 
Leading By Example
Building an institutional strategy is another fundamental task  of senior executives. Leaders will not build the kind of company they  want if they do not establish some institutional goals based on some  shared values. 
The best way of passing on organizational values and principles to  employees is by practicing what you preach. In this way, the leader's  influence ripples outward and cascades down through mid-level managers,  says Bernard Meunier of Nestlé. 
Besides setting an example, those at the top have to dedicate time for  those at the next level of management to make sure that everyone knows  exactly what is expected of them, offering training, guidance and  correction as necessary. 
In the end, it's not so much policies or strategic plans that build an  organization, but people. Good executives seek human contact, get  personally involved in problem solving and constantly monitor that  organizational priorities and goals are being met.
 
.jpg)
 
.jpg)
"Ruinas Romanas", Bolonia, Taria, South of Spain.