Freedom, Inc. : how corporate liberation unleashes employee potential and business performance / Brian M. Carney and Isaac Getz.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: [Place of publication not mentioned] : Somme Valley House, [2016].Edition: Third edition.Description: xxi, 377 pages ; 23 cm.ISBN:- 9780998074306
- HD5660.U5 C37 2009
- M1 Human Resource Management: General References
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Book | TBS Barcelona | Core Textbooks | HD5660.U5 CAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | B05416 |
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HD70.D44 OXF The Oxford handbook of management in emerging markets | HD70.J3 KON Strategy and structure of Japanese enterprises | HD2755.5 EDE Research methods in international business | HD5660.U5 CAR Freedom, Inc. : how corporate liberation unleashes employee potential and business performance | HD6054.3 SAN Lean in : women, work, and the will to lead | HD9696.8 LEV In the plex : how Google thinks, works, and shapes our lives | HD9940.A2 CHO Luxury fashion retail management |
Corporate liberation is not a strategy. It is a business philosophy that leaders around the world are using to radically transform their organizations. Liberating leaders believe that a workplace based on respect and freedom is a more natural environment than one based on mistrust and control. So they acted to align their organizations with these beliefs: They liberated people's initiative and potential and with it, unshackled their companies' performance. A lot has happened since Freedom, Inc. first appeared in 2009. The book itself has been translated to six other languages. In France, it won the best business book award and was the No.1 business/management bestseller on Amazon.fr seven months in a row. More importantly, it has inspired hundreds of leaders to launch their own corporate liberation. The French daily Le Monde has heralded the start of a corporate liberation movement in France. Since then, the phenomenon has made the cover of leading periodicals, been shown on the evening news of major European TV chains, and been the subject of a 90-minute TV documentary that broke all the records for popularity. Most liberated companies have been small and medium size-though some have grown tremendously since. Yet increasingly, multinationals such as Michelin or Decathlon-operating in Europe, America and Asia-are joining the corporate liberation movement that pioneers such as W.L. Gore and USAA began. Corporate liberation has no frontiers, geographical or industrial. Vineet Nayar has liberated an Indian high-tech giant and David Marquet, a U.S. nuclear submarine. Leaders of organizations of all sizes and types are shedding their hierarchies and bureaucracies and transforming them into respect- and freedom-based workplaces. Every morning their employees go to work, but many prefer to say they go to have fun-pursuing a common dream using their own initiative.
M1 Human Resource Management: General References