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Last Thursday, July 9, I had the pleasure to converse with Laurie Markwart,
a health administration university student at the University of Saskatchewan, who
is presently spending her Summer working at North East Health District, Nipawin.
We talked about the changes taking place in management and about leadership philosophies.
Laurie asked if "among such philosophies there was a happy medium."
It is an absurdity trying to reconcile management philosophies which preach either
the assembly line, or the study of mice, or the contingency approach. I told Laurie
that there were not happy mediums, and that today's role of a leader is to be an
architect, a teacher, a facilitator of changes. In our knowledge economy, where we
are all customers of each other, within or out of our organization, we have no "happy
medium" management approach beyond the commitment to satisfy the real customer's
needs to feel serviceable, cooperative, competent and human.
Management Philosphies |
Role of a Leader |
Customer's needs |
Assembly Line |
Architect |
serviceable |