Finding the Best and the Brightest: A Guide to Recruiting,
ISBN: , SKU: , AUTHOR: Thoms, Peg A., PUBLISHER: Praeger Publishers, ong>Weong> all choose our leaders. ong>Weong> hire them to run our companies. ong>Weong> vote them into ong>ofong>fice. ong>Weong> appoint them to committees. ong>Weong> decide to work for, serve, and follow them. In fact, all leadership is relative; by taking direction or orders, going to bat or war, marching behind, listening, and agreeing, ong>weong> ong>areong> choosing to allow another individual to lead us. Whether the stage is a corporation, a country, a club, a school, or any other organization, effective leaders matter. Yet despite such high-prong>ofong>ile examples ong>ofong> leadership disasters--from the California recall ong>ofong> Gray Davis to the fall ong>ofong> such business titans as Ken Lay and Sam Waksal--ong>weong> continue to choose, hire, and elect poor leaders. Finding the Best and the Brightest explores this phenomenon in business, politics, and other sectors ong>ofong> society, and proposes an antidote--an approach to choosing leaders based on a set ong>ofong> criteria designed to align individual qualities with organizational or institutional goals. Peg Thoms challenges the popular trend toward "transformational" leadership, which focuses on identifying universal characteristics, arguing instead that leadership must be developed in context. Many organizations, for example, need "operational" leaders who can focus on present-day tasks, such as designing superior products and delivering exceptional customer service, and not inspirational or "visionary" leaders, whose otherwise admirable qualities might be ill-suited to the challenges at hand. Outlining six typical leadership search scenarios--from school principal to hospital CEO--Thoms shows readers how to identify the traits and behaviors that ong>areong> most essential for the position and how to structure interviews and other search techniques to elicit the most informative responses and home in on the best candidates. She also reminds us that many organizations fail not because they can't find good leaders but because they can't keep them, and ong>ofong>fers strategies to promote leadership development. Whether you ong>areong> an executive giving the nod to a new department head, a concerned citizen casting your vote for a municipal councilman, a club member choosing a new president, or an aspiring leader deciding which ong>ofong>fer will provide the greatest growth opportunities, Finding the Best and the Brightest ong>ofong>fers fresh insights on the dynamic relationship betong>weong>en leaders and those who follow them.