Leadership

Most Popular Stories 2007

Stories and research about career advancement, negotiation, and leadership are perennially popular at HBS Working Knowledge, and 2007 was no exception. But this past year our readers also showed growing interest in the topics of team performance, the networked economy, and innovation.

Here are the 20 most popular stories from 2007.

  1. How Much of Leadership Is About Control, Delegation, or Theater?
    Summing up the many responses, Jim Heskett says that the mix of control, delegation, and theater employed by successful leaders depends on timing and circumstances. "The strongest messages I received were that if leadership involves control, it is only over setting an organization's course and priorities."

  2. HBS Cases: How Wikipedia Works (or Doesn't)
    For HBS professor Andrew McAfee, Wikipedia is a surprisingly high-quality product. But when his concept of "Enterprise 2.0" turned up on the online encyclopedia one day—and was recommended for deletion—McAfee and colleague Karim R. Lakhani knew they had the makings of an insightful case study on collaboration and governance in the digital world.

  3. Feeling Stuck? Getting Past Impasse
    Feeling "stuck," as psychologically painful as it is, is the first step to awareness of new opportunities in career and in life, says Harvard Business School's Timothy Butler. In this Q&A and excerpt from his new book, Getting Unstuck, he explains six steps for getting from here to there.

  4. The Key to Managing Stars? Think Team
    Stars don't shine alone. As Harvard Business School's Boris Groysberg and Linda-Eling Lee reveal in new research, it is imperative that top performers as well as their managers take into account the quality of colleagues. Groysberg and Lee explain the implications for star mobility and retention in this Q&A.

  5. Making the Move to General Manager
    Managers face a critical transition when they rise from functional expert to general manager. It's an exciting shift but it's also fraught with pitfalls. A new executive education program at Harvard Business School aims to smooth and accelerate this transition, as professor and program chair Benjamin C. Esty explains.

  6. What's to Be Done About Performance Reviews?
    What can we do to make performance reviews more productive and less distasteful? Should their objectives be scaled back to just one or two? Should they be disengaged from the determination of compensation and, if so, how?

  7. Encouraging Dissent in Decision-Making
    Our natural tendency to maintain silence and not rock the boat, a flaw at once personal and organizational, results in bad—sometimes deadly—decisions. Think New Coke, The Bay of Pigs, and the Columbia space shuttle disaster, for starters. Here's how leaders can encourage all points of view.

  8. Are Great Teams Less Productive?
    While studying teamwork, Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson chanced upon a seeming paradox: Well-led teams appeared to make more mistakes than average teams. Could this be true? As it turned out, good teams, which value communication, report more errors. In a recent research paper Edmondson and doctoral student Sara Singer explore this and other hidden barriers to organizational learning.

  9. Five Steps to Better Family Negotiations
    Family relationships are complicated, even more so when your uncle, mother, or daughter is your business partner. Harvard Business School's John A. Davis and Deepak Malhotra outline 5 ways to analyze and improve dealmaking and dispute resolution while protecting family ties. As they write, family negotiations are difficult yet also contain built-in advantages.

  10. Sharpening Your Skills: Negotiation

  1. Understanding the 'Want' vs. 'Should' Decision

  1. HBS Cases: When Good Teams Go Bad

  1. Handicapping the Best Countries for Business

  1. Podcast: The Authentic Leader

  1. Delivering the Digital Goods: iTunes vs. Peer-to-Peer

  1. Jumpstarting Innovation: Using Disruption to Your Advantage

  1. Bringing 'Lean' Principles to Service Industries

  1. How Do You Value a "Free" Customer?

  1. Businesses Beware: The World Is Not Flat

  1. Will Market Forces Stop Global Warming?

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