How To Act Like A Ceo 10 Rules For Getting To The Top And Staying There

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How to Act Like a CEO: 10 Rules for Getting to the Top and Staying There

This book looks at how CEOs approach decision-making and leadership by demonstrating that although no two CEOs think alike, there are certain habits of mind and a disposition to decide and to act that most leaders have in common.
Mastering Individual Effectiveness

Author: Nancy A. Mercurio
language: en
Publisher: Wellness Institute, Inc.
Release Date: 2001-10
Globalization as a phenomenon has had an inordinate impact on the teaching and practice of anthropology. These papers and essays address the methodological problems that have arisen and in so doing fill a major gap in the contemporary study and teaching of the subject.
Bloomberg's New York

Author: Julian Brash
language: en
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Release Date: 2011-01-15
New York mayor Michael Bloomberg claims to run the city like a business. In Bloomberg's New York, Julian Brash applies methods from anthropology, geography, and other social science disciplines to examine what that means. He describes the mayor's attitude toward governance as the Bloomberg Way—a philosophy that holds up the mayor as CEO, government as a private corporation, desirable residents and businesses as customers and clients, and the city itself as a product to be branded and marketed as a luxury good. Commonly represented as pragmatic and nonideological, the Bloomberg Way, Brash argues, is in fact an ambitious reformulation of neoliberal governance that advances specific class interests. He considers the implications of this in a blow-by-blow account of the debate over the Hudson Yards plan, which aimed to transform Manhattan's far west side into the city's next great high-end district. Bringing this plan to fruition proved surprisingly difficult as activists and entrenched interests pushed back against the Bloomberg administration, suggesting that despite Bloomberg's success in redrawing the rules of urban governance, older political arrangements—and opportunities for social justice—remain.