Ok, so a "heavy" title, Might Of The Chain: Forging Leaders of Iron Integrity by Mike Studeman, Real Admiral, U.S. Navy (Ret). Spoiler alert, this book is about leadership and management, not that the two aren't one concept. Really though, are all managers leaders and conversely, all leaders managers? By the way, the "Chain" in the title: think anchor and the corresponding chain that is used to lower and raise an anchor.
Yes, the Might Of The Chain is another management and leadership book but one with lots of wisdom and experience offered by a guy who albeit, is in a very structured environment. And maybe that's one of the lessons: structuring or at least being intentional about the nonprofit environment and culture has the potential to produce higher outcomes than unstructured environments and cultures.
Towards this end of providing counsel to those who seek to be the best manager and possibly leader who also instills management practices that can produce, presumably, outstanding results, Might Of The Chain can serve as a strong reference. Divided into 46 3-5 page chapters Might discusses many of the individual and corporate dimensions of leadership a manager and management in general. Each chapter is an experience lesson ended closed with 4-5 lessons for consideration. I could actually envision a unit or division manager and/or exec. beginning each manager meeting with a reading and a brief discussion of the lessons. Not really inspiring as much as thoughtful and educational. But isn't this what a management book should do?
I recommend this book and will wrap-up my review with an example of one of the lessons I thought particularly poignant. From the chapter on branding:
A leader's skill at branding and marketing has the power to either accelerate or decelerate any endeavor. Leaders must use all tools at their disposal to win support, build momentum, and keep positive inertia going.
Thumbs Up!
To acquire: Might Of The Chain: Forging Leaders of Iron Integrity, Michael Studeman, Stone Tower Press; www.stonepowerpress.com