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Week
of October 27, 2003 : Archives
The Transparency Edge. (How Credibility Can Make or Break You in
Business)
By: Barbara Pagano and Elizabeth Pagano
How
to re-construct yourself to be a leader – and it all rests
on personal credibility – and transparency.
I always wonder if I want to read another one version of a “business-personality-extreme-makeover”,
because most of those books are so out of touch with reality, it’s
bewildering.
One of our lines of business is communications coaching –
for dealing with the media, public presentations, confrontations
and other crisis situations. We’ve probably written at least
a book’s worth of advice on these topics. And we freely admit
that we’ll use the occasional book as a reference to some
of our key points. This is one book that we will add to our reference
collection.
A cautionary note: it is about personal business communications
development. Many senior business leaders shy away from books like
this. But we feel that opinion leaders would do well to pick up
this book and read it behind closed doors, if they feel real insecure
about learning about leadership skills.
This is a common sense book – with chapters that serve
as reminders about what makes people great leaders. For example,
how you handle mistakes, the authors say, actually may be more important
than getting things right the first time. (I can think of a hundred
examples of this that apply to business and political leaders, just
off the top of my head.) Or how about how you deliver bad news?
Now there’s an indicator of what good leadership is.
Being honest. There’s a little test in the book for you
to evaluate how honest you really are – and how honest
others may perceive you to be. Then there’s the checklist
on how effective you are in keeping promises and honoring commitments.
Ouch.
And then there’s the chapter titled: “Watch Your
Mouth”. Okay, I’ll admit it, I had to read this
one because that’s one of those topics that I have a little
difficulty with sometimes. It starts with a Dale Carnegy quote:
“Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain –
and most fools do.” Think about the columnists and politicians
you know that this quote applies to. This is a brutal chapter, in
that it covers what’s often worst about our communications
– talking down to people, being nasty about people, “blamestorming”
(guess what that is), setting up “us-vs.-them” situations,
etc.
The bottom line of the reconstruction steps the Paganos give
is the building blocks of credibility their steps will give you.
Many of the points they make will not surprise you. It’s the
packaging and the presentation that make this a very readable book
– and a useful one to compare your own credibility with.
If you’re proud of your leadership abilities, you still need
this book, because – dare I say – none of us are perfect
leaders. If you’ve read any of my other book reviews, you
know I like checklists, stories that illustrate lessons and research
to back up the theories. This book has all this, and the Pagano’s
should feel proud to have written one of the best – and simplest
– personal communications books I’ve seen in a few years.
---
Rating: 5.0 Stars (out of 5)
Reference: McGraw-Hill, New York, 2004 (no, this is not a
typo)
ISBN: 0-07-142254-4
Publisher’s Link: http://books.mcgraw-hill.com/cgi-bin/pbg/0071422544?mv_session_id=8Gg8TQmP&mv_pc=1§ioncode=#description
Author’s Link: www.transparencyedge.com
Comments? E-mail Bruce Rozenhart
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