Booked and busy: leadership lessons from literature

预订与忙碌:文学中的领导力启示

Editor's Picks from The Economist

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2024-07-17

5 分钟
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A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist. Today, our Bartleby columnist offers a reading list for the aspiring CEO. Find out why we recommend you ditch the management manual and instead pick up Macbeth.  Listen to what matters most, from global politics and business to science and technology—subscribe to Economist Podcasts+
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  • The Economist Hi, this is Tom Lee Devlin, co-host of Money Talks,

  • our weekly podcast on markets, the economy and business.

  • Welcome to Editor's Picks.

  • Here's an article handpicked from the latest edition of The Economist, read aloud.

  • He could keep the routine going, that's all.

  • As a description of your typical middle manager,

  • it is hard to surpass Marlow's view of the boss at a river port in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness.

  • The novella is a critique of colonialism in Africa and an exploration of power and morality.

  • It is also a guide to dealing with corporate bureaucracy.

  • Marlow's steamboat is in tatters and the manager is useless.

  • Marlowe must solve the problem himself.

  • It sounds like an ordinary day at a Fortune 500 company.

  • Bookshops are stuffed with management tomes on how to be a good leader,

  • inspire others, survive office politics,

  • navigate cultural differences and win negotiations.

  • But executives would do well to ignore the corporate self-help shelves and head instead for the classics section.

  • Great works of literature, with their piercing examination of the human condition,

  • have much to teach the aspiring chief executive about business, values of honesty,

  • empathy and commercial acumen, as well as insights into vanity, pettiness,

  • greed and ruthless ambition,