BOOK...The Enthusiasms of Tom Peters
In his
exuberant new book, the management guru sums up 50 years of experience with
exhortations to pursue excellence.
The Excellence Dividend:
Meeting the Tech Tide with Work That Wows and Jobs That Last
by Tom Peters, Vintage, 2018
A couple of years ago,
prior to an interview with Tom Peters, I visited his website to see what he was
up to. I found the answer in a gargantuan 4,000-slide PowerPoint deck that
Peters titled, with his trademark typographic hyperbole, “THE WORKS.” By way of introduction to
the deck, he wrote, “Make no mistake…THIS
IS A 17-CHAPTER BOOK…which happens to be in PowerPoint format.”
The
Excellence Dividend punctuates
that claim almost as well as the ! that
Peters adopted as his corporate logo after two years of noodling 25 years ago.
The paperback is an annotated version of “The Works” — a fleshed-out outline
that frequently depends on fonts to make its points.
The CEO’s first
commandment, per Peters?
“CEO Job #1 is setting — and micro-nourishing, one day, one hour, one minute at a time — an effective people-truly-first, innovate-or-die, excellence-or-bust corporate culture.
The key words in my declaration are…
one day, one hour, one minute at a time.”
“CEO Job #1 is setting — and micro-nourishing, one day, one hour, one minute at a time — an effective people-truly-first, innovate-or-die, excellence-or-bust corporate culture.
The key words in my declaration are…
one day, one hour, one minute at a time.”
The best way to keep up in
a fast-changing world?
“READ! READ!! READ!!! READ!!!!”
“READ! READ!! READ!!! READ!!!!”
The world’s most
underserved market?
“W = >2 x (C + I) = $28T
Women’s Market Size = More Than Two Times China Plus India Combined = $28 Trillion”
“W = >2 x (C + I) = $28T
Women’s Market Size = More Than Two Times China Plus India Combined = $28 Trillion”
As you may be starting to
suspect, The Excellence Dividend is a 450-page boldbardment of
ideas, facts, figures, memes, and manifestos. Peters calls it the sum total of
his 50-year career, more than half of which he’s spent as a leading light of
management thought.
Swallowing such a book
whole is exhausting, mainly because it is delivered with such brio and packed
with enough insight and advice to keep you busy for the next 50 years. When I
review a book, I fold page corners, underline in ink, and scrawl marginalia. I
folded so many pages in The Excellence Dividend that its top
right corner is half again as thick as the rest of the book. I ran a new pen
dry while reading it; at first I thought the pen was defective.
If you’ve read Peters
before or if you’re one of his 159,000 Twitter followers, you’ll recognize that
the new book’s six sections and 15 chapters represent his ongoing and
undiminished enthusiasms. People management — the focus of section 3, which
leads off with: “ONE MORE (DAMN) TIME:
PUTTING PEOPLE FIRST” — is the greatest of these.
Peters traces his passion
for people management back through his work at McKinsey with Bob Waterman,
which resulted in the publication of In Search of Excellence in
1982, all the way to his stint as a Seabee in Vietnam during the war. “I
arrived in country with civil engineering tools aplenty, but I was soon given a
detachment to command in a rather unpleasant setting,” Peters writes.
“Overnight, I discovered that 99 percent of my concerns were ‘people concerns’
(so-called/mistakenly called soft concerns). And I was totally unprepared for
‘soft-stuff leadership’ in a setting where bad guys were shooting at us and the
roads were intensively mined.”
Whether the subject is
culture-building, treating employees like customers, performance appraisals, or
training, The Excellence Dividend is shot through with advice
on the soft stuff — some of which is pretty radical. In his discussion of the
job apocalypse that may occur as AI and robotics spread throughout companies,
for instance, Peters declares “people first” as a leadership imperative:
“Your principal moral obligation as a leader is to develop the skill set of every one of the people in your charge — including semipermanent and temporary — to the maximum extent of your abilities and consistent with their ‘revolutionary’ needs in the years ahead. (The bonus: This is also the premier profit maximization strategy!)”
Another notable enthusiasm
of Peters is his predilection for action, which tracks back to the Seabee’s
“can do” mind-set. “Forget that glossy strategy,” he says.
“JUST BUILD IT. NOW. CAN DO.”
“JUST BUILD IT. NOW. CAN DO.”
Likewise, although he has
been preaching the gospel of excellence for decades, Peters has never been one
to wait around for the perfect application of it. He declares:
“EXCELLENCE is the ultimate short-term strategy.
EXCELLENCE IS THE NEXT FIVE MINUTES.
(Or not.)”
“EXCELLENCE is the ultimate short-term strategy.
EXCELLENCE IS THE NEXT FIVE MINUTES.
(Or not.)”
Underlying all of Peters’s enthusiasms is his enthusiasm for the
ideas of other people. I can’t think of any business writer who uses other
people’s ideas as freely as Peters, or who is as openly generous with crediting
his sources. More often than not, he uses quotes, concepts, and stories of
other people as the bulk of a section and then just adds a few sentences to
drive the point home.
For instance, after several pages of quotes and statistics on the
“oldies” market, Peters writes, “I have offered very little commentary in this
section. This, I believe, is one of those times when the collective statistics
really do speak for themselves.
“Or, perhaps more accurately: These stats outline in
incontrovertible terms an incredibly large opportunity in an incredibly large,
incredibly underserved market.
“Sooooo?
“Please get off your bloody millennials high horse and get on the
horse that will take you straight to the bank.”
Not many authors could get
away with this narrative approach. But Peters carries it off with aplomb
because it accurately reflects his personality and modus operandi. “I consider
myself, in effect, a red exclamation mark,” writes Peters in the epilogue
of The Excellence Dividend. At the age of 75, he still looks at
business, with all of its inequities and foibles, and then argues passionately
— as he has done for decades — that this thing of ours can be an “emotional,
vital, innovative, joyful, creative, entrepreneurial” endeavor. Peters’s
enthusiasm is exclamatory indeed.
by Theodore Kinni
https://www.strategy-business.com/article/The-Enthusiasms-of-Tom-Peters?gko=12405&utm_source=itw&utm_medium=20180717&utm_campaign=resp
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