"Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Others Don't" is a book by Jim Collins that explores the key factors that separate successful companies from those that struggle to achieve long-term success. Collins and his team of researchers studied a wide range of companies over a period of five years, analysing their financial performance and leadership practices to identify the characteristics that set the great companies apart.
Complaint Management Excellence: Creating Customer Loyalty through Service Recovery by Sarah Cook is a comprehensive guide that explores the importance of effectively managing customer complaints and using service recovery as a means to build customer loyalty. Cook provides valuable insights, practical strategies, and actionable techniques to help organisations handle complaints with excellence.
In Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What's Right and What to Do About It, Max H. Bazerman and Ann E. Tenbrunsel delve into the psychological and social mechanisms that cause individuals and organisations to act unethically despite their intentions to uphold moral standards. The book explores the gap between who people think they are and how they actually behave, focusing on the concept of "bounded ethicality"—the idea that our ability to act ethically is limited by cognitive biases and situational pressures.
Great One-on-One Meetings for Busy Managers: Manage your team in a way that's empowering for them and dependable for you by Nick Robinson is a practical guidebook that offers valuable insights and strategies for conducting effective one-on-one meetings with team members. Recognising the challenges faced by busy managers, Robinson provides practical advice and actionable techniques to optimise these meetings, fostering stronger relationships and driving team performance.
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Others Don't is a book by Jim Collins that explores the key factors that separate successful companies from those that struggle to achieve long-term success. Collins and his team of researchers studied a wide range of companies over a period of five years, analysing their financial performance and leadership practices to identify the characteristics that set the great companies apart.
Hug Your Haters: How to Embrace Complaints and Keep Your Customers by Jay Baer is a compelling book that explores the power of embracing customer complaints and turning them into opportunities to enhance customer loyalty and business success. Baer provides valuable insights, real-world examples, and actionable strategies to help organisations effectively handle customer feedback and create a culture of customer-centricity.