An executive should be
a realist; and no one is less realistic than the cynic.
Integrity
may be difficult to define, but what constitutes lack of integrity is of such
seriousness as to disqualify a person for a managerial position. A person should never be appointed to a
managerial position if his vision focuses on people’s weaknesses rather than
their strengths. The person who always
knows exactly what people cannot do, but never sees anything they can do, will
undermine the spirit of her organization.
An executive should be a realist; and no one is less realistic than the
cynic.
A person should not be appointed if
that person is more interested in the question “Who is right?” than the
question “What is right?” To ask “Who is
right?” encourages subordinates to play it safe, if not to play politics. Above all, it encourages subordinates to
“cover up” rather than to take corrective action as soon as they find out that
they have made a mistake. Management
should not appoint a person who considers intelligence more important than
integrity. It should never promote a
person who has shown that he or she is afraid of strong subordinates. It should never put into a management job a
person who does not set high standards for his or her own work.
ACTION
POINT: Define integrity. Work on those attributes of integrity that
you require in a new employee.
Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices
Quoted from
The Daily Drucker, page 111
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