 Price $12.00
| WORK WITHOUT MANAGERS: A VIEW FROM THE TRENCHES
(1990): This was a shocking look at American business and why eighty
percent of the productive work was being accomplished by less
than twenty percent of the workers. It concluded that the organization
in most cases still operated in 1945 nostalgia, which was management’s
greatest hour as it had a decisive role in the winning of World
War Two. But over the last six decades, since that war over,
there has been a shift in work from being mainly manual to
mainly mental, from dependence on management to call the shots
to knowledge workers at the level of consequences making the
decisions. Too often, however, position power has remained
stubbornly at the controls, reluctant to face the new reality.
The book systematically looks at the consequences of this anachronistic
behavior, including an examination of all the failed cosmetic
attempts to improve the situation without changing anything.
Industry Week named it one of the ten best business books of
the year, while the Business Book Review Journal named it one
of the four major works of the year. It was reviewed extensively
including on National Public Radio’s “All Things
Considered.”
READERS’ COMMENTS
Dr. Thomas L. Brown, editor, Industry Week: “Work
Without Managers is one of the Top 10 Business books of 1991. “Fisher
opens by declaring that any large company today is 20 to
30 divisions in search of a corporation, and he has yet hit
his stride.”
James R. Wright, columnist, Dallas Morning News: “I
find Work Without Managers the most insightful and perceptive
examination of the American workplace today.”
Alex Krunic, editor, Business Perspective, Innsbruck,
Austria: “Dr.
Fisher argues the key to the future is the empowerment of
professional workers. The suggestions made here are bound
to spark controversy on all levels of organization and therefore
should be on the reading list of any interested in understanding
the present day American dilemma.”
Business Book Review Journal: “It is our opinion that
Fisher has more than accomplished his goal to stimulate discussion
and debate, and that Work Without Managers promises to foster
a controversy that will be instrumental in affecting a fundamental
changing in the American workplace.”
National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered”: Ten years ago, many were calling for a direction in business
that called for less management, less managers. In the early
80s, USC professor Warren Bennis said that American businesses
were “over-managed and under-led.” And, sure
enough, many businesses chopped layer upon layer of managers
from the ranks. Now Tom Brown has found a book that argues
that, fear not, Work Without Managers can be far from chaos:
it might even be better. Work Without Managers is the angriest
book I have read about business and management since Dick
Cornuelle’s early 80’s book, De-Managing America.
Angry? Let me just read you the first 50 words: “The
era of the free lunch has ended. This century, which began
with such paternal control and obedience for America, has
run amuck. Now, nothing and no one is in control. Take corporate
America. Any large company today is 20 to 30 divisions in
search of a corporation. The pendulum of centralization-decentralization
is more a yo-yo contest with no clear winners, only painfully
confused losers. Trauma is written on the face of American
enterprise. Meanwhile, this once powerful and energetic nation
doesn’t seem to know what is happening.”
Jim Fisher, an ex-blue collar laborer, chemist, scientist,
and industrial psychologist, no doubt means every mean word.
This is not casual corporate bashing; Work Without Managers
is premeditated capital punishment of standard managerial
systems that Fisher thinks have outlived their prime, and
may not have been useful even then.
You’ll find the book and its author a compelling challenge.
This is a roller coaster in print. At its peak, like when
he talks about the “Six Silent Organizational Killers,” you’ll
find points where you’ll exclaim, “why hasn’t
someone said this before?” For example, Fisher argues
that people don’t show hustle, don’t do things
that need to be done, and have reasons for feeling this way.
On the other hand, when he talks about the MBA as “merely
a vocational degree,” and lists 16 classics in literature
that MBAs probably never studied, but should, some readers
will recoil and demand the head of “this scoundrel
author.”
Work Without Managers is one of those almost self-published
books, which evoke pictures of its author furiously banging
away on the keyboard at 3 a.m., hand grasping for more coffee.
It is a wide-ranging indictment of the way tradition has
taught us to define “management” and has taught
us to allow ourselves to “be managed.”
But Fisher’s argument, off-beat as it will seem to
most readers, has this to commend it: no one is print today
is on “the other soapbox” arguing for keeping
things as they are.
Jim Fisher’s style in this book may be a controlled
rant, but he seems to be ranting in the right direction.
|