Turn the Ship Around!: A True Story of Turning Followers into Leaders

99,00 EGP

Description

Price: $0.99
(as of Nov 03,2024 14:34:55 UTC – Details)


Customers say

Customers find the book outstanding, well-written, and easy to read. They say it drives home some very important points and ideas to help them become better leaders. Readers also appreciate the clear summaries of actionable items at the end of each chapter. In addition, they mention the concepts are easy to understand and the techniques used and explained are incredible.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

This Post Has 11 Comments

  1. Love this book!
    This was the chosen book for my book club at work. I am so happy with this purchase. It is well written and super interesting.

  2. A Great No-Frills Book on Leadership
    Many books on leadership are, in a word, dull. They are either personality-driven mumbo jumbo with a lot of buzz words or boring Mckinsey-type reports with a mounds of useless statistics that don’t apply to your situation. I finished Mr. Marquet’s book in just under a week and it was a page-turner along with providing some very useful and insightful information. He provides real-world examples that play out in a concise and interesting narrative that makes you think about how to become a better leader in your business, professional field, or career. Since most people reading the book are probably not submarine skippers, there are some very helpful rhetorical questions at the end of each chapter on how to apply Mr. Marquet’s best practices to your own situation. The low price for the Kindle edition was nice as well.Mr. Marquet describes the leadership style he utilized to turn the USS Santa Fe from the joke on the water front to a great boat. In full disclosure, I was a submarine junior officer in Pearl Harbor when Mr. Marquet was the Commodore. Submarine culture is not conducive to innovation or being a risk taker. This is due to the obscene amount of oversight and micromanagement from external organizations as well as senior officers and chiefs being severely punished for the slightest mistake. It doesn’t help that the operational requirements are so hectic that you usually just think about getting through the day rather than having some long-term strategy. Mr. Marquet took a huge risk in implementing his leadership style, and the proof is in the improvement of the boat’s tactical capabilities, operational readiness, and most importantly morale of the crew (not an easy task as submarines are not the greatest working environments). The advice of stepping back and completely reorienting your organization’s culture is important for senior-level leadership. Furthermore, it is comforting that Mr. Marquet advocates a culture of respect toward subordinates and listening to constructive criticism at a time when so many managers are interested in adopting the belittling and humiliating leadership traits of the late Steve Jobs.I recommend Mr. Marquet’s book to any executive-level or mid-level manager who would like to think seriously about the steps they need to employ to improve their organization by working cooperatively with their people and empowering them. 5 Stars!

  3. A brilliant read AND a how to manual
    The leader-leader method of leadership is by no means a new idea, in fact it has been used in ancient world to great effect to concur empires, by some. But this modern version written brilliantly not just as a how to manual but also as an easy flowing read that stays with the reader long after.I highly recommend this book not only to those who are new to leadership, but especially to those who aren’t new to it and think they’re good at it. Because if you use the traditional leadership methods, it’s nothing good compared to this.I just wish the author had not intentionally mis-stated the name of the Persian Gulf as the arabian gulf. This is a political hackery to not use the correct name not only in use since thousands of years ago but also the geographic society and united nations have always recognized the correct name of that body of water as Persian Gulf. It sadly and greatly lowers the author’s own intellectual level. Otherwise he has achieved a masterpiece of work on the subject of leadership which should be required reading for all leadership positions.

  4. Excellent book on leadership and cultivating leaders
    Ultimately good leadership is what will move organizations in the right direction. This book addresses the pitfalls f what is perceived to be good leadership. It demonstrates how cultivating leaders is the model of good leadership and discusses how to get there.

  5. A must read if you lead.
    I listened to this book on Audible first – liked it so well and had so many notes to make – I had to get a physical copy.Outstanding read for anyone in a leadership position.

  6. Upside down leadership: A Review of “Turn the Ship Around” by L. David Marquet
    One of the words that are used in leadership in civic leadership, corporate leadership, non-profit leadership, and the military is the use of the term ‘empowerment.’ The use of this word is inspiring and it has great meaning to people but the truth is very few leaders and organizations really do not know how to correctly share power with others. To empower people requires the discipline for the leader not to over-perform as to take matters into one’s own hands and to complete tasks themselves or the leader to simply give directional commands to people in order to complete a specific task. Most often, what occurs in organizations is that we empower ‘followers’ which creates a dependency on people for not having to think for themselves as well as not having to take on any real ownership of what the mission and goals of a particular organization is leaving the desire for excellence to be regulated to a few leaders who are brokering all the power. What this creates are organizational cultures that cannot realize the best of the intelligence, talent, and skills from their greatest resource which is their people. In this top-down culture leadership is not understood to be an emotional phenomenon not simply a cognitive process by which transformation of the individual begins in the interior life of an individual person as one is given the opportunity to take risks and explore the credibility of one’s on authority as part of a team.Therefore, the author takes the reader on his journey of becoming the captain of the nuclear powered attack submarine U.S.S. Santa Fe. The author begins to discuss his own emerging philosophy borne out of his reflection that he no longer desires to lead from the top down but instead desires to lead leader to leader. It is in the context of becoming a leader of a low performing ship with men who were used to a top-down culture that dehumanized their ability to contribute to the betterment of the operation of the vessel by thinking and taking responsibility for more than just their own assigned task but to see how they contributed to the overall mission of the ship. The understanding concerning this new paradigm of leadership is more of an enabling art as it related to releasing human talent and potential. In the words of the author, David Marquet,”You may be able to “buy” a person’s back with a paycheck, position, power, or fear, but a human being’s genius, passion, loyalty, and tenacious creativity are volunteered only. The world’s greatest problems will be solved by passionate, unleashed “volunteers.”[1] This writer appreciates what Dana Theus in her review of this book presents a functional definition of empowerment by writing,” By definition, we’re sending our troops inside their soul, where we have no control. The essence of empowerment is that you hand over control and see what they can do with it. When it works, they boost performance with creativity, drive and innovation. But of course, they sometimes don’t.Leading this way is impossible for control freaks and nerve-wracking for everyone else, because we may end up presiding over a performance nosedive, lost profit or angry customers. True empowerment that which leads to inpowered success, is not bunk, but it is a risk.”[2]None of us are as smart as all of us!David Marquet’s definition of leadership is interwoven throughout the book: “Leadership is communicating to people their worth and potential so clearly that they are inspired to see it in themselves.” [3] It is with this definition that you the reader can begin to see the writings of Robert Greenleaf’s Servant Leadership Theory on steroids. Ultimately a leader is more concerned for the success of those that leader serves than even their own success. In order to embrace this perspective as more than a trendy approach for a leader to disguise their mechanisms for control the author presents how a leader must begin to deconstruct a culture of control and then build mechanisms on two pillars which are competence and clarity. A leader who is going to begin a leader to leader culture must begin with the conviction that genius resides in the people that they serve with and decision-making at its best requires that genius to be heard.Me Pastor- You SheepI highly recommend ecclesiastical leaders to read this book because most of the mistakes of leadership in the church come from archaic notions of leadership that are simply untrue. We are living in the middle of one of the most profound shifts in human history, where the primary work of mankind is moving from the Industrial Age of “control” to the Knowledge Worker Age of “release.” What a think this book can do for Pastors in the local church is a functional matrix by which the theological conviction of the “Priesthood of all Believers” can possibly find expression. Protestants for years have been critical of other Christian traditions identifying them as being theologically institutional giving birth to hierarchical systems which create top-down priestly elite. Thus, people must be dependent on these leaders for their ability to contribute and grow. What I have experienced is that Protestants have created their own hierarchies with very controlling environments just different language. If ecclesiastical leadership are convinced that each person is “God’s workmanship” (Ephesians 2:10) than I agree with the author, David Marquet, that our goal should not simply be “empowerment” but instead “emancipation.” With emancipation we are recognizing the inherent genius, energy, and creativity in all people, and allowing those talents to emerge. It is with this understanding of emancipation that one comes to the sobering awareness, “That a leader realizes that they do not create the talents in people nor do they empower them to use their talents. But a leader understands that they do have the power to prevent the talents of the people they lead to come out.” The awareness that I as a leader can limit the giftedness and talents of others being expressed is enough for me to recommend that you read this book.[1] L. David Marquet, Turn the Ship Around, p xxi.[2] Dana Theus on October 22nd, 2012, […][3] L. David Marquet, Turn the Ship Around, p xxii.

  7. Excellent read for those organizations aiming to transform themselves in today’s World. For me complements very well others authors e. g. Humanocracy and Reinventing Organizations.

  8. This book is necessaryFor those who consider themselves very experienced, this book provides important to hints and structure to improve your idea or visionYou help me a lot, and I thank David Marqet for sharing all his experience and knowledge.

  9. Change, Transformation und Leadership, Themen, die mich im Alltag immer begleiten, aber die Literatur ist dazu meist theoretisch und in der Praxis nur schwer umzusetzen. “Turn the ship around” ist aufgrund der nuklearen Ausstattung nicht unbedingt näher an meinem Alltag, aber es zeigt, dass die Prinzipien überall funktionieren können. Lässt sich gut lesen, die paar Seiten (~ 200) sind in wenigen Stunden verschlungen. Gut geschrieben und für mich absolut spannend. Dazu tatsächlich im Alltag umgesetzt, ich mag Erfahrungsberichte und dieser war fesselnd und lehrreich.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *