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The Great Challenges For Top Public Executives. The Forum for Executive Public Management Copenhagen, Denmark September 1, 2003 Robert D. Behn Kennedy School of Government Harvard University. The Eight Great Challenges for Top Public Executives.
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The Great ChallengesFor Top Public Executives The Forum for Executive Public Management Copenhagen, Denmark September 1, 2003 Robert D. Behn Kennedy School of Government Harvard University
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge The Motivation Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge The Motivation Challenge The Collaboration Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge The Motivation Challenge The Collaboration Challenge The Accountability Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge The Motivation Challenge The Collaboration Challenge The Accountability Challenge The Learning Challenge
The Eight Great Challengesfor Top Public Executives The Leadership Challenge The Strategy Challenge The Performance Challenge The Motivation Challenge The Collaboration Challenge The Accountability Challenge The Learning Challenge The External-Communication Challenge
The Leadership Challenge Leadership is the active recruiting of people’s intellects and energies to accomplish important purposes.
Leadership requires: The articulation of an inspiring mission.
Leadership requires: The articulation of an inspiring mission. Personal persistence.
Leadership requires: The articulation of an inspiring mission. Personal persistence. A commitment to generating enthusiasm.
The Strategy Challenge Strategy is the overall conceptual design of the means for achieving important purposes.
Strategy requires: A clear recognition of the true purposes to be achieved.
Strategy requires: A clear recognition of the true purposes to be achieved. An understanding of how people and organizations behave.
Strategy requires: A clear recognition of the true purposes to be achieved. An understanding of how people and organizations behave. The ability to match behavior to purposes by crafting concrete yet subtle organizational endeavors that will, directly or indirectly, influence people to help achieve those purposes.
The Performance Challenge Performance is the production of results that citizens value.
Performance requires: The establishment of specific output targets that people are charged with producing.
Performance requires: The establishment of specific output targets that people are charged with producing. A conscious theory about how the organization’s outputs contribute to the desired outcomes.
The Motivation Challenge Motivation is the mobilization of individual and collective efforts to produce results.
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information:
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information: • Every individual knows how well he, she, or the team is doing;
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information: • Every individual knows how well he, she, or the team is doing; • Every individual knows how well every other individual or team is doing;
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information: • Every individual knows how well he, she, or the team is doing; • Every individual knows how well every other individual or team is doing; and • Every individual knows that everyone else knows how well he, she, or the team is doing.
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information: • Every individual knows how well he, she, or the team is doing; • Every individual knows how well every other individual or team is doing; and • Every individual knows that everyone else knows how well he, she, or the team is doing. A conscious effort to reward success (not merely to punish failure) by creating “esteem opportunities.”
Motivation requires: A medium that provides everyone with three important pieces of information: • Every individual knows how well he, she, or the team is doing; • Every individual knows how well every other individual or team is doing; and • Every individual knows that everyone else knows how well he, she, or the team is doing. A conscious effort to reward success (not merely to punish failure) by creating “esteem opportunities.” The aggressive defense of subordinates who make minor, honest mistakes in the pursuit of public purposes.
The Collaboration Challenge Collaboration is the cooperative work with other (public, nonprofit, and private) organizations that have similar, yet not identical, missions to achieve broader, overlapping purposes.
Collaboration requires: An understanding of the common purposes to which collaborators wish to contribute.
Collaboration requires: An understanding of the common purposes to which collaborators wish to contribute. An appreciation of the legitimacy of the needs and missions of other organizations.
Collaboration requires: An understanding of the common purposes to which collaborators wish to contribute. An appreciation of the legitimacy of the needs and missions of other organizations. The ability to convince people and organizations with diverse objectives to focus on the commonalities (rather than the differences) in their underlying missions.
The Accountability Challenge Accountability is the necessity for public organizations to abide by the rules for finances and fairness while, at the same time, producing real results.
Accountability requires: An appreciation of both the formal and informal rules for finances and fairness.
Accountability requires: An appreciation of both the formal and informal rules for finances and fairness. A recognition of how these rules can hinder performance.
Accountability requires: An appreciation of both the formal and informal rules for finances and fairness. A recognition of how these rules can hinder performance. The ability to direct attention to these rules without becoming so mesmerized by them that the organization is left with no resources or energy for producing results.
The Learning Challenge Learning is the uncovering of basic principles of action, management, and leadership from a plethora of details in new and very specific circumstances followed by the application of these general principles in new situations.