首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Read the article below about leadership in business and the questions on the opposite page. For each question(13-18), mark o
Read the article below about leadership in business and the questions on the opposite page. For each question(13-18), mark o
admin
2019-03-30
34
问题
Read the article below about leadership in business and the questions on the opposite page.
For each question(13-18), mark one letter(A, B, C or D)on your Answer Sheet.
THE EFFECTIVE LEADER
From workplace surveys, I have found that most people want to be - and feel they could be - more effective leaders. Certainly they want their leaders to be more effective. But what do we mean by effective leadership in business? It would appear a simple question. Unfortunately, effectiveness is more easily recognisable when it is absent. Leaders who attempt to use business jargon and try out the latest ideas are too often perceived as figures of fun. Whilst people frequently agree on what ineffective leadership is, clearly knowing what not to do is hardly helpful in practice.
Huge amounts of research have been done on this very wide subject. When you look at leadership in different ways, you see different things. While descriptions of leadership are all different, they are all true - and this is where disagreement arises. However, leadership is specific to a given context. The effectiveness of your actions is assessed in relation to the context and to the conditions under which you took them.
For a magazine article I wrote recently, I interviewed one publishing executive, author of several well-known publications, about what effective leadership is. It was significant that, at first, he did not mention his own company. He talked at length about what was happening in the industry - the mergers, take-overs and global nature of the business. Before he was able to describe his own objectives for the new publishing organisation he was setting up, he had to see a clear fit between these proposals and the larger situation outside. Obvious? Of course. But I have lost count of the number of leaders I have coached who believed that their ideas were valid, whatever the situation.
At this point, I should also mention another example, that of a finance director whose plan of action was not well received. The company he had joined had grown steadily for twenty years, serving clients who were in the main distrustful of any product that was too revolutionary. The finance director saw potential challenges from competitors and wanted his organisation to move with the times. Unfortunately, most staff below him were unwilling to change. I concluded that although there were certainly some personal skills he could improve upon, what he most needed to do was to communicate effectively with his subordinates, so that they all felt at ease with his different approach.
Some effective leaders believe they can control uncertainty because they know what the organisation should be doing and how to do it. Within the organisation itself, expertise is usually greatly valued, and executives are expected, as they rise within the system, to know more than those beneath them and, therefore, to manage the operation. A good example of this would be a firm of accountants I visited. Their business was built on selling reliable expertise to the client, who naturally wants uncertainty to be something only other companies have to face. Within this firm, giving the right answer was greatly valued, and mistakes were clearly to be avoided.
I am particularly interested in what aims leaders have and what their role should be in helping the organisation achieve its strategic aims. Some leaders are highly ineffective when the aim doesn’t fit with the need, such as the manufacturing manager who was encouraged by her bosses to make revolutionary changes. She did, and was very successful. However, when she moved to a different part of the business, she carried on her programme of change. Unfortunately, this part of the business had already suffered badly from two mismanaged attempts at change. My point is that what her people needed at that moment was a steady hand, not further changes - she should have recognised that. The outcome was that within six months staff were calling for her resignation.
The publishing executive’s priorities for leadership focused on
选项
A、significant and long-term aims.
B、internal organisational aspects.
C、professional skills and abilities.
D、overall business contexts.
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/YpoO777K
本试题收录于:
BEC中级阅读题库BEC商务英语分类
0
BEC中级阅读
BEC商务英语
相关试题推荐
•Lookatthenotebelow.•Youwillhearamancallingaboutmeetingwithsomebody.FRENCHBUSINESSTRIP:Wed2/10-10-Fri4/10Ap
•Youwillhearapresentation.ThispresentationisaboutvariouskindsofproblemsoccurringduringdoingbusinessinBrazil.•
•Lookatthenotesbelow.•Youwillhearawomanleavingamessageaboutameeting.TODAYBUSINESSMAGAZINE
•Lookatthenotesbelow.•Youwillhearawomanleavingamessageaboutameeting.TODAYBUSINESSMAGAZINE
•Therearethirtyquestionsonthisquestionpaper.•Instructionsaregivenonthetape.•YoucanwriteonthisQuestionPape
•Therearethirtyquestionsonthisquestionpaper.•Instructionsaregivenonthetape.•YoucanwriteonthisQuestionPape
•Therearethirtyquestionsonthisquestionpaper.•Instructionsaregivenonthetape.•YoucanwriteonthisQuestionPape
•Youwillhearfivespeakerstalkingaboutbusinesstrips.•Foreachrecording,choosethereasonthespeakergivesforthetr
—Readthearticleaboutchoosinganagent.—Inmostofthelines34~45thereisoneextraword.Itiseithergrammaticallyincor
—Readthearticleaboutchoosinganagent.—Inmostofthelines34~45thereisoneextraword.Itiseithergrammaticallyincor
随机试题
定性的风险评价方法是()。
A.支气管哮喘B.喘息性慢性支气管炎C.支气管肺癌D.肺炎支原体肺炎E.克雷伯杆菌肺炎刺激性咳嗽,伴气急、痰中带血,支气管解痉药效果欠佳。诊断是
下列哪一行为构成对知识产权的侵犯?
下列案件属于森林公安机关管辖的是:
地役权消灭的主要原因有()。
可采用沥青混凝土摊铺机铺筑的水泥混凝土路面是()。
单位卡户的资金可以从其基本存款账户转账存入,也可以将销货收入的款项存入其账户。()
我国商业银行不得在境内进行的业务有()。[2010年5月真题]
下列银行从业人员的行为中,合法合规的是()。
乐意讲或者听有关自己的有趣故事或笑话,是一个人极为自信的标志。这种品格常常只在人们较为成熟时才会具有,它比默许他人对自己开玩笑的良好品质还要豁达。由此可以推出()。
最新回复
(
0
)