Conferences, Commentary & More
Home
Complete archive of features and news articles, sample policies and procedures, assessments, and surveys.
Network and exchange ideas with other members in the forums or ask an expert in one of the hosted forums.
Access vendor directories, product case studies and showcases.
Read Best in Shows, view our conference calendar, read commentaries and take our news poll.
The Hot List
Blogs
Topic Channels
Comp, Benefits, Rewards
HR Management
Legal Insight
Recruiting and Staffing
Software and Technology
Training and Development
= Member Only
Workforce HR Jobs
Find A Job
Post A Job



Subscribe Now
Workforce Magazine
Subscriber Help
























= Member Only


Feature:

The Last Word: A Champion Leader

  

Feature Contents

1. The Last Word: The Mood Is Subdued
The HR profession has been beaten up by the economy and battered by being the bearers of bad news. So it’s no surprise that attendance is down and things are quiet at this year’s SHRM conference.

2. The Last Word: Hunkering Down and Getting Back to Basics
SHRM’s 2009 conference will likely be remembered for its subdued atmosphere, lack of rah-rah speechifying and pragmatic focus in the Year of the Big, Bad Economic Downturn.


Similar Documents

Related Topics



Sponsored Tools

Discover PCRecruiter HR Solutions
Web-Based HR Solutions Used By Organizations Worldwide. Schedule a Demo Now!


Receive a FREE Employee Retention Guide
Tips and tools focused on hiring and retaining top-performing employees.


Cut the fat not the muscle.
Learn how the world's most productive companies are leveraging talent.


Making tough decisions to run leaner?
Learn new strategies for successful reorganization, redeployment and recovery.


Download: Keeping Talented Employees
Download this White Paper for 10 key actions that will help keep talent around.


Get Listed >>>

 



The Last Word: A Champion Leader


There are timeless management lessons we can all learn from watching a great coach like Phil Jackson operate.
By John Hollon
Comments 0 | Recommend 0

hen you hear people talk about great managers, a lot of names are bandied about, usually starting (and sometimes ending) with Jack Welch.

     Yes, the Great Jack is arguably one of the best of all time, but he hasn’t managed much of anything since leaving General Electric nearly 10 years ago. These days, he’s largely confined to just talking about good management, as he will be doing this month at the Society for Human Resource Management’s annual conference in New Orleans.

     But there is another guy out there who rivals and perhaps even eclipses Welch as one of the greatest managers and workforce strategists of all time. He’s currently managing and adding new honors to his already long and impressive leadership résumé. I’m talking about the great Zen master himself—Los Angeles Lakers head coach Phil Jackson.

     Some people don’t think of them in this way, but ultimately, great coaches ARE great managers. And Phil Jackson is the greatest professional basketball coach of all time, with 10 NBA titles to his credit, the latest coming June 14. He’s right up there with former UCLA basketball coach John Wooden, who won 10 titles as a head coach.

     Still, Jackson gets dinged by a lot of shortsighted critics who believe that just about anyone could have rolled out the basketball and won a half-dozen titles in Chicago with Michael Jordan, or four more in Los Angeles with Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant. When you get handed great players like them, how hard can winning be? As The Dallas Morning News put it, “for coaches, there’s a thin line between lucky and legendary.”

     Maybe that’s true. Certainly there is a degree of luck that every highly successful person needs to help facilitate their ultimate success, the notion being that if you have to choose, it’s always better to be lucky than good. But can you discount winning 10 championships and say it’s simply about having been handed great players? Lots of coaches have great players. If it was just about having superstar players, why haven’t more coaches who also have great talent won a bunch of titles?

     Maybe it’s because Phil Jackson is different from other coaches in the way he motivates players—even the superstars like Michael Jordan—to build something larger and greater than themselves.

     “[I think] it’s his ability to bring people together,” Kobe Bryant told the British newspaper The Guardian. “The biggest thing that he does so well is he continues to coach the group, continues to coach unity and chemistry and togetherness. And that’s the biggest thing, because when you’re together you can withstand adversity. If you’re not, you can easily break apart and become a team of individuals.”

     This is the classic definition of a manager—someone who brings together a group of individuals to accomplish something as a unit that they could not have accomplished on their own. Plus, Jackson does it without the histrionics that all too many people believe that leadership is about.

     “This championship may be Jackson’s finest hour,” The Guardian noted. “Two hip replacements mean that Jackson is no longer jumping up and down on the sidelines as he once did in Chicago. Yet quietly, in his own understated manner, he has done what he always did: prodding and cajoling when required, but otherwise letting his players utilize the talents within.”

     There are timeless management lessons we can all learn from watching a great coach like Phil Jackson operate. As maddening as his Zen master philosophy and laid-back court presence can seem at times, there is a deep philosophical underpinning to Jackson’s management style. He is secure in what he needs to do to get the best out of his team and he doesn’t let anything get in the way of that. Isn’t that the essence of what great workforce management is all about?

     It is for me, and that’s what I will be thinking about next week in New Orleans when I’m sitting there at SHRM’s opening session, listening to Jack Welch. And although I’m sure he’ll have some fine management wisdom to impart, I’ll be wondering—what would Phil Jackson have said if he were here instead?

Workforce Management, June 22, 2009, p. 50 -- Subscribe Now!


John Hollon is editor of Workforce Management. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.



Features Archive

           
E-mail this document Printer-friendly version Write to the Editor Reprint Information

Reproductions and distribution of the above article are strictly prohibited. To order reprints and/or request permission to use the article in full or partial format, please contact our Reprint Sales Manager at (732) 723-0569.


Comments

Guidelines: Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. You are fully responsible for the content you post.








Copyright © 1995-2009 Crain Communications Inc.
All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement