The Question Every Executive Should Ask

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Published
MIT Sloan Management Review, 2017.
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Edition
1st edition.
Language
English
UPC
53863MIT58427

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Description
Every CEO has stakeholder groups whose interests he or she needs to balance: customers, employees, the board, shareholders, regulators, partners, nongovernmental organizations, and local communities. Bernard J. Tyson, chairman and CEO of managed care giant Kaiser Permanente Health Care, arguably has more than most. In addition to the nearly 12 million people who receive their health care from Kaiser Permanente, Tyson's stakeholders include thousands of physicians, nurses, medical technicians, administrators, and managers - as well as unions, government agencies, industry watchdogs, pharmaceutical suppliers, and more. Given all the competing priorities and pressures (including political and economic uncertainties associated with the U.S. health care market), how does a CEO stay grounded? Tyson recently spoke about his views on leadership with MIT Sloan Management Review editor in chief Paul Michelman. On Hiring "Wherever in the organization we are hiring, we need to ask if the employee's personal mission in life aligns with the mission of the organization. My job is to maintain an environment conducive to attracting people who fit our culture. Making sure we are all clear on the mission is core to that." On Dealing With Complexity "I would argue that, in simplistic terms, the old model was [that] those in management were the thinkers, and the rest of the workers were the doers. Now we live in a day and age where everybody gets to think and do. I want the frontline nurse, who has access to the same information I do, to act on the information pertaining to his or her profession and, with that access and freedom, come up with new ideas and new ways of getting work done." On Empowerment "In the past, power was centralized in the hands of the few people who had access to information and who used that access to direct the narrative for the company. So we were benefiting from the intellect of just a handful of people. Now that information is available everywhere, the leader's critical question is, 'How do I charge up the organization so that we're maximizing the intellect of all of our people?' ... As I'm talking to you right now, a medical team is likely attending to someone with a near-death experience in one of our emergency departments. My job is not to call to see what they're going to do next. It's to make sure they have the tools, the equipment, the know-how, and the decision power to make the right judgment when called upon, in the interest ...
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Michelman, P. (2017). The Question Every Executive Should Ask (1st edition.). MIT Sloan Management Review.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Michelman, Paul. 2017. The Question Every Executive Should Ask. MIT Sloan Management Review.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Michelman, Paul. The Question Every Executive Should Ask MIT Sloan Management Review, 2017.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Michelman, P. (2017). The question every executive should ask. 1st edn. MIT Sloan Management Review.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Michelman, Paul. The Question Every Executive Should Ask 1st edition., MIT Sloan Management Review, 2017.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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5c0c3498-9cde-a234-e000-9d83bfccdcdd-eng
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Grouped Work ID5c0c3498-9cde-a234-e000-9d83bfccdcdd-eng
Full titlequestion every executive should ask
Authormichelman paul
Grouping Categorybook
Last Update2024-10-22 03:20:10AM
Last Indexed2024-12-03 03:14:17AM

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