T O P I C ��� R E V I E W
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thoughtcriminal84
Member # 480
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posted
Aside from having over 400 wives and ritually scarring himself with the rusty Sword of Mars, it could be argued that Attila the Hun was one of the world's greatest managers.
Which is why I bought and read this thin, tongue- in-cheek volume titled "Leadership Advice from Attila the Hun."
It was amusing, in its way. I've never read a book about the art of Management before, but I doubt many of them say much about systematically pillaging and raping those who oppose you.
Anyway. I ask all of you: What makes a good leader? Or even, a good manager? This is a question that has some relevancy to my life right now, and I would appreciate some input. Serious or otherwise, however you want to respond.
Thankee-sai.
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
I take my advice from Atilla the Bun.
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U//Magnus
Member # 239
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posted
The scourge of dough?
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Jernau Morat Gurgeh
Member # 318
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posted
Well, I think one prerequisite is that you mustn't be afraid of bureacracy, management-speak, and lots of vague bullshit.
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Mover
Member # 417
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posted
When I was a squad leader in the Army I told my squad what I expected and what I would do if they acheived my goals. It was simple, be the best damn mortar crew in the 38th Infantry Division, and I would be the most lax leader they had.... I signed out hummers for trips to the titty-bars and the likes.... I had more people wanting to join my squad.... Then when I was the Section Sergeant I told them they had to be the best section in the Division, to get the same treatment.
As the Assistant Manager and Manager of a Colotryme in Port Huron I treated people fairly, fitting rewards and punishments to the situation.
As a supervisor for security I did the same as the above for Colortyme.
As a vacuum store manager I also did the same....
In none of these would I ever raise my voice, no matter the problem.
Treat people fairly, never get the I-am-the-Boss big head, and never have double standards, except as a punishment for you self, and never let a good job un-noticed. If a person comes to you with an idea, don't just dismiss them, listen to the idea, then explain the cons from your point of view, and see if they can come up with a better one, or if the cons are few implement the idea. People will work better. Do the things that need to be done and no one likes. For Colortyme I really hated cold calling for business, just picking a name out of the phone book and calling that person sucked, but since I did it the people I was leading would do it to the best of their ability. Setting goals and rewarding by level of acheivement also worked for moral, at Colotyme I would do the persons job for a day and they would get it off with pay, if they hit their goal.
Okay, I think I have babbled on enough.....
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
"...just picking a name out of the phone book and calling that person sucked..." Well, I would point out that the person you were calling quite probably hated it even more than you. :-)
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Mover
Member # 417
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posted
Some, we did select names with addresses in areas we had customers, it had a 10% to 20% return rate on calls to contracts.....
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Nim Pim
Member # 205
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posted
Can someone please define "tongue-in-cheek" for me, I can't find a good explanation anywhere and my scribes refuse to talk to me after the...incident.
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Malnurtured Snayer
Member # 411
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posted
It's when you take you tongue, and place the tip of it against your cheek and talk. It's very odd, and why people want to do it is beyond me.
Actually, it's sarcasm.
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thoughtcriminal84
Member # 480
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posted
you have no idea how drunk I was when I posted the above...
self-doubt much? obviously.
a week or so into the thing, and I'm a fucking jedi master.
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U//Magnus
Member # 239
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posted
Once, I saw. Bongo the Bitch-Faced waffle iron. TM, of cours.e.
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TSN
Member # 31
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posted
Ow.
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