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Management - Professional & Reference, Change Management, Organizational Behavior - General & Miscellaneous
Gods of Management by Charles Handy — book cover

Gods of Management

by Charles Handy
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Overview

Would Zeus be more effective running a bank or an ad agency? Executives will find out in The Gods of Management, which is perhaps the most intriguing work from the best-selling author of The Age of Unreason and The Age of Paradox. Charles Handy has written a highly entertaining book, but more important, he provides an extremely valuable framework for understanding management styles and the corporate cultures associated with them.
Handy uses four Greek gods to illustrate for managers the four basic approaches they can take, and the organizational cultures that result. In a Zeus or "club" organization, power radiates from the top boss, and a personal relationship with that individual matters more than any formal title or position. We see this often in small entrepreneurial companies, brokerage firms, investment banks, and political groups. An Apollo "role" culture results in a highly structured, stable company—a bureaucracy with precise job descriptions, such as a life insurance company, a monopoly, or a firm with a long history of success with a single product. The Athena "task" culture emphasizes talent and youth, and promotes continuous, successful team problem-solving, as reflected in consultancies, ad agencies, and startup high-tech enterprises. Finally, a Dionysus "existential" organization survives mainly so that individuals can achieve their purposes: think of a university, or of a group medical practice, or of architects who share office space. Handy shows that each "god," or company culture, stems from different assumptions about the basis of power and influence, what motivates people, how people think and learn, and how change should occur. And he reveals that firms with the wrong culture often wallow in inefficiency and unhappiness, either blind to their plight or unwilling to struggle to find the right culture for the firm.
If managers are aware of their own "gods" and of the cultural choices available for them and their organization, they can create a more productive and satisfying workplace. In this delightfully readable, stimulating volume, Charles Handy shows them how.

A highly stimulating and insightful framework for understanding leadership styles and corporate cultures, Gods of Management uses four Greek gods to illustrate the basic types. Handy shows managers how to be aware of their own "gods" and of the cultural choices available for them and their organization, so they can create a more productive and satisfying workplace.

About the Author, Charles Handy

About the Author:
Charles Handy is a Fellow of the London Business School. His books on management have been translated into over a dozen languages, and have sold over one million copies around the world. His first, Understanding Organizations has been the standard textbook in Britain for many years.

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Editorials

David Rouse

Because British management guru Handy's works, such as "The Age of Unreason" (1990) and "The Age of Paradox" (1994), are becoming more frequently requested here in the U.S., Oxford University Press has decided to release a first American edition of a book Handy wrote in 1978, which has already been translated into many languages and updated and revised twice. Handy offers a unique approach to understanding different management styles. Starting with management theorist Roger Harrison's four types of organizations, Handy identifies four Greek gods (Apollo, Zeus, Athena, and Dionysus) that typify the organizational cultures of the four. He then matches godly attributes to each, in the hope that his analogy will spark insight and serve as a diagnostic tool for resolving conflicts that result from clashing styles. Handy says this is the book of which he is most proud, and that affirmation should arouse curiosity.

From Barnes & Noble

Would Zeus bemore effective running a bank or an ad agency? The author cleverly uses four Greek gods--Zeus, Apollo, Athena, & Dionysus--to illustrate distinct management styles & the corporate cultures they represent.

Book Details

Published
December 28, 1995
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 1995.
Pages
254
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195096163

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