It's Okay to Be the Boss: The Step-by-Step Guide to Becoming the Manager Your Employees Need
Author: Bruce Tulgan
Do you feel you don't have enough time to manage your people?
Do you avoid interacting with some employees because you hate the dreaded confrontations that often follow?
Do you have some great employees you really cannot afford to lose?
Do you secretly wish you could be more in control but don't know where to start?
Managing people is harder and more high-pressure today than ever before. There's no room for downtime, waste, or inefficiency. You have to do more with less. And employees have become high maintenance. Not only are they more likely to disagree openly and push back, but they also won't work hard for vague promises of long-term rewards. They look to you--their immediate boss--to help them get what they need and want at work.
How do you tackle this huge management challenge? If you are like most managers, you take a hands-off approach. You "empower" employees by leaving them alone, unless they really need you. After all, you don't want to "micromanage" them and don't have the time to hold every employee's hand. Of course, problems always come up and often snowball into bigger problems. In fact, you probably spend too much of your time solving problems and falling behind on your work . . . which leaves even less time for managing people . . . which opens the door for even more problems!
In It's Okay to Be the Boss, Bruce Tulgan puts his finger on the biggest problem in corporate America--an undermanagement epidemic affecting managers at all levels of the organization and in all industries--and offers another way. His clear, step-by-step guide to becoming the strong manager employees need challenges bosses everywhere to spell out expectations, tell employees exactly what to do and how to do it, monitor and measure performance constantly, and correct failure quickly and reward success even more quickly. Now that's how you set employees up for success and help them earn what they need. Tulgan opens our eyes to the undisciplined workplace that is overwhelming managers and frustrating workers and invites bosses everywhere to accept the sacred responsibility of managing people. His message: It's okay to be the boss. Be a great one!
Books about: Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings or How to Be a Working Actor
Call Me Ted
Author: Ted Turner
"Early to bed, early to rise, work like hell and advertise!"
These words of fatherly advice helped shape Ted Turner's remarkable life, but they only begin to explain the colorful, energetic, and unique style that has made Ted into one of the most amazing personalities of our time. Along the way - among his numerous accomplishments -- Ted became one of the richest men in the world, the largest land owner in the United States, revolutionized the television business with the creation of TBS and CNN, became a champion sailor and winner of the America's Cup, and took home a World Series championship trophy in 1995 as owner of the Atlanta Braves.
An innovative entrepreneur, outspoken nonconformist, and groundbreaking philanthropist, Ted Turner is truly a living legend, and now, for the first time, he reveals his personal story. From his difficult childhood to the successful launch of his media empire to the catastrophic AOL/Time Warner deal, Turner spares no details or feelings and takes the reader along on a wild and sometimes bumpy ride.
You'll also hear Ted's personal take on how we can save the world...share his experiences in the dugout on the day when he appointed himself as manager of the Atlanta Braves....learn how he almost lost his life in the 1979 Fastnet sailing race (but came out the winner)...and discover surprising details about his dealings with Fidel Castro, Mikhail Gorbachev, Jimmy Carter, Bill Gates, Jack Welch, Warren Buffett, and many more of the most influential people of the past half century.
Ted also doesn't shrink from the darker and more intimate details of his life. With his usual frankness, he discusses a childhood of loneliness (he wasleft at a boarding school by his parents at the tender age of four), and the emotional impact of devastating losses (Ted's beloved sister died at seventeen and his hard-charging father committed suicide when Ted was still in his early twenties). Turner is also forthcoming about his marriages, including the one to Oscar-winning actress, Jane Fonda.
Along the way, Ted's friends, colleagues, and family are equally revealing in their unique "Ted Stories" which are peppered throughout the book. Jane Fonda, especially, provides intriguing insights into Ted's inner drive and character.
In CALL ME TED, you'll hear Ted Turner's distinctive voice on every page. Always forthright, he tells you what makes him tick and what ticks him off, and delivers an honest account of what he's all about. Inspiring and entertaining, CALL ME TED sheds new light on one of the greatest visionaries of our time.
Publishers Weekly
"I don't spend a lot of time dwelling on the past or thinking about myself," Turner claims, but the media tycoon turns out to have a pretty good memory-except for certain events, like the death of his younger sister, which he admits he's suppressed completely. After dropping out of college, Turner worked his way up from the bottom of his father's billboard company, which he inherited when his father committed suicide, and then slowly turned it into an international media empire-an uphill battle he records in entertaining detail ("I don't think of myself as losing," he says of the occasional setbacks, drawing on his experiences as a champion sailor. "I'm simply learning how to win"). Turner's version of events is frequently interrupted by supplementary "Ted Stories" from those closest to him, including his children and business colleagues-even competitors. These commentaries are not always complimentary; in two passages, ex-wife Jane Fonda candidly discusses the psychological blocks she believes keep him from achieving full emotional and spiritual intimacy. There's little to challenge Turner's provocative reputation, but his reflections reveal the depth of calculation behind his career as a so-called loose cannon. (Nov. 11)
Correction:The correct publisher of The Empathy Gap, reviewed Oct. 27, is Viking.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Table of Contents:
1 Early Years 1
2 McCallie 11
3 College and the Coast Guard 23
4 Billboards 41
5 Tragedy 53
6 Picking Up the Pieces 59
7 On My Own 67
8 Sailing Gets Serious 79
9 WTCG: "Watch This Channel Grow!" 91
10 The Braves 109
11 The SuperStation 125
12 The America's Cup 145
13 Cable News Network 159
14 Fastnet 169
15 CNN Launch 181
16 A Dagger Pointed at Our Heart 191
17 World Citizen 207
18 The Goodwill Games 215
19 CBS 223
20 MGM 237
21 The Cable Operators 249
22 Meeting Jane Fonda 259
23 "Give Me Land, Lots of Land" 269
24 The Gulf War 277
25 Movies and Cartoons 289
26 Networking 303
27 Time Warner Merger 315
28 The New Time Warner 327
29 Billion-Dollar Gift 343
30 Transitions 355
31 AOL: Phased Out and Fenced In 367
32 Stepping Away 383
33 Onward and Upward 399
Appendix 415
Index 419
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