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Two Stanford professors lay out common workplace challenges in their new book titled "The Friction Project." Coauthor Robert Sutton outlines five of those "frictions." download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Using examples such as Apple and Microsoft, coauthor Robert Sutton laid out five examples of friction in workplaces in an interview with Business Insider. Advertisement"A lot of organizations create incentives for building fiefdoms independent of the value of the fiefdoms," Sutton says, meaning people are rewarded for running large teams even if they don't deliver.
Persons: Robert Sutton, , Huggy Rao, It's, Sutton, Kim Scott, Satya Nadella, Steve Ballmer, Ethan Miller, Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger Organizations: Stanford, Service, Apple, Microsoft, Business, Google, Big Tech, Getty Locations: Cupertino , California
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailKim Scott of 'Radical Candor' on the continuing CEO failure to communicateFormer Google executive Kim Scott, author of 'Radical Candor,' tells CNBC's Julia Boorstin at the recent Disruptor 50 Connect event that corporate leaders are too afraid to tell the truth in ways that matter to workers.
Persons: Kim Scott, CNBC's Julia Boorstin Organizations: Google
If you've watched HBO's "Silicon Valley" or NBC's "The Office," you've seen several examples of obnoxious aggression and manipulative insecurity exhibited by leaders. It almost goes without saying that actual managers shouldn't look to mimic Michael Scott, or the command-and-control culture dramatized on television. Instead, leaders should strive for what former Apple and Google executive Kim Scott calls the radical candor approach, showing that you care personally while challenging directly. "It's rare that we do both at the same time, especially with feedback at work, but really feedback in any part of your life," Scott said. "At the core of radical candor is a good relationship between manager and employee, between peers, and up, down and sideways," she said.
Persons: you've, Michael Scott, Kim Scott, Scott, Julia Boorstin, it's, they'll, they're Organizations: Apple, Google, CNBC Senior Media, Tech Locations: San Francisco
Former Amazon managers say they were pressured to cut successful workers to meet attrition goals. In anticipation of Amazon's performance-review period, he told Insider, he'd kept careful notes on what his employees were doing well and where they could improve. These people said leadership would place employees in Focus even if the managers of those employees said that the workers had met or exceeded expectations. A few weeks later, he said, his manager told him he was on Pivot and had the option to leave the company with severance, which he did. Amazon managers are required to submit their performance ratings for employees in an online tool, then discuss their rationale with managers above them, he said.
Of all the highly-recommended business books, ones written by men tend to get a lot of attention. We asked female founders what books about entrepreneurship — written by women — they recommend. The business books that land on must-read lists year after year, heavily recommended by CEOs, executives, and entrepreneurs, usually have one thing in common: they're written by men. So we asked female founders and business leaders what books they recommend on leadership, entrepreneurship, and running a company. Here are 22 business and leadership books written by women.
Total: 5