Measure of a Leader
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Average customer review:Product Description
With American business facing a leadership crisis and top corporate executives being replaced at a rate of one per day, Aubrey Daniels and James Daniels introduce readers to a bold and proven new way to measure and pursue leadership, Measure of a Leader.
Based on over 30 years of pioneering work with the world's leading organizations, Daniels and Daniels explain how anyone can increase their leadership impact by becoming a critical observer of human behavior. By demonstrating how to recognize and measure the effect of their actions on followers, the authors provide readers with valuable, scientifically-proven methods for increasing their leadership impact, including how to:
Measure of a Leader’s solutions are rooted in Daniels’ “twelve measures”, indicators that provide the best possible forecast of a leader’s impact on the growth of the business, on the customers and the marketplace, and on his or her legacy. The measures are presented in four key categories:
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #852378 in Books
- Published on: 2005-12-05
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 203 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Dr. Aubrey C. Daniels, internationally recognized author and speaker, is the world’s leading authority on behavioral science in the workplace. He founded Aubrey Daniels International in 1978 and is the author of three best-selling books widely recognized as management classics: Bringing out the Best in People, Performance Management: Changing Behavior That Drives Organizational Effectiveness, and Other People’s Habits. Daniels has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today, Fortune, Entrepreneur, Biznet, CNN, CNBC, and CBS radio. He received his undergraduate degree in psychology from Furman University and earned his master’s and doctorate from the University of Florida. Daniels serves on the Board of Trustees of the Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies and Furman University, and is an Associate of Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy! School of Government. His numerous awards include the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Organizational Behavior Modification Network and the Outstanding Service Award from the International Association for Behavior Analysis, which also named him a 2005 Fellow.
James E. Daniels, vice president and senior consultant with Aubrey Daniels International, has developed productivity and quality improvement systems for corporations in the United States, Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, and Italy. A graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, Daniels received his master’s from the University of Florida. He is a former editor of Performance Management Magazine and co-author of the definitive behavioral text Performance Management: Changing Behavior that Drives Organizational Effectiveness, 4th Edition. Daniels specializes in creating performance measurement systems for knowledge workers. He helps organizations design and implement strategies that inspire and reward the discretionary effort of employees in both union and non-union environments. His clients represent a wide range of industries including (but not limited to) service, manufacturing, engineering, banking, publishing, telecommunications, nuclear power generation, travel, and sales. Daniels also applies his expertise in behavioral change techniques to enhance and ensure the effectiveness of quality improvement processes such as Six Sigma.
Customer Reviews
Behavioral experts take on leadership
In Measure of a Leader, behavioral experts Dr. Aubrey Daniels and James Daniels propose yet another "new model of leadership." Under this model, the authors suggest that the leader's role is to create conditions under which followers apply discretionary effort to implement the organizational mission, vision and values. They define discretionary behavior as "that behavior that a person could do if they choose, but for which they would not be punished if they
didn't...commonly (referred) to as going above and beyond the call of duty" (p. 16).
Unlike other books on leadership which focus on the leader's behavior, this book claims that the follower's behavior in response to the leader is what truly defines effective leadership. The four criteria of follower behavior include followers:
1. Apply discretionary effort towards the leader's goals;
2. Voluntarily sacrifice self-interest for the leader's cause;
3. Reinforce or critique others to encourage conformance to the leader's teachings; and
4. Establish guidelines for their own personal behaviors based upon what they perceive the leader
would approve or disapprove.
The book covers 19 chapters in an easy-to-read 200 pages. I found chapter three on discretionary effort, chapter five on leaders and managers, chapter nine on measuring follower response, and the Antecedent-Behavior-Consequence (ABC) Model of follower motivation in chapter 11 to be of particular interest. The Appendix includes a very useful checklist highlighting 50 things to do for increasing leadership impact.
The writing is crisp and matter-of-fact, almost free of academic jargon that can confuse readers. It's clear through the examples and terminologies the authors use that they are incorporating lessons from their personal experiences as military leaders into this model. The book's coverage of the leader's application of positive reinforcement to create momentum for change is valuable since organizations typically rely on negative reinforcement and then wonder why the right behaviors aren't demonstrated consistently. Negative reinforcement reduces the likelihood of negative behaviors but doesn't encourage acceptable behavior--positive reinforcement does.
Recommended for business consultants, corporate managers, or professors interested in understanding the importance of follower behavior in defining effective leadership and how to inspire discretionary effort in achieving organizational mission, vision, and values.
Armchair Interviews says: Another look at leadership.
What leadership really is
The Daniels brothers have brought a new level of precision and behavioral focus to the leadership advocacy arena.
I've never read anything that portrays the true nature of leadership better than this book.
It's not a quick read, which may limit the audience in this era of EADD (executive attention deficit disorder). It's also not a superficial scraping of what leadership might appear to be.
It's more like what leadership really is, and the best ways to see that it occurs with more regularity and success.
outstanding piece of work
Every person in a leadership position or student who plans to be in a leadership role needs to read and absorb the wonderful insights the Daniels brothers have put into this book. This is the first time I've seen anyone provide a viable methodology for truly measuring leadership. The book is rich with examples and remedies that any serious student leadership will find invaluable in their quest for excellence.




