How to Manage in Times of Crisis. Ицхак Адизес
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ADDITIONAL WORKS BY THE AUTHOR

      Managing Corporate Lifecycles: An Updated and Expanded Look at the classic work Corporate Lifecycles (2004)

      The Ideal Executive: Why You Cannot Be One and What To Do About It: A New Paradigm for Management (2004)

      Management/Mismanagement Styles: How to Identify a Style and What to Do About It (2004)

      Leading the Leaders: How to Enrich Your Style of Management and Handle People Whose Style is Different from Yours (2004)

      The Pursuit of Prime (1996)

      Mastering Change: The Power of Mutual Trust and Respect in Personal Life, Family, Business and Society (1993)

      How to Solve the Mismanagement Crisis (1979)

      Self-Management: New Dimensions to Democracy (with Elisabeth Mann-Borgese) (1975)

      Industrial Democracy, Yugoslav Style: The Effect of Decentralization on Organizational Behavior (1971)

      To view a full list of all available Adizes Institute publications, or to place an order, please visit www.adizes.com/store

      © 2009 Dr. Ichak Adizes

      Published by

      Adizes Institute Publications

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      Library of Congress Control Number: 2009902144

      Design and layout by RJ Communications LLC, New York

      Printed in the United States of America

      Additional copies may be ordered from www.adizes.com.

      Acknowledgments

      I want to thank my associates Nebojsa Caric (Adizes South East Europe), Sunil Dovedy (Adizes USA), and Carlos Valdesuso (Adizes Brazil) for their most helpful comments on an early draft. My thanks go to Nan Goldberg for editing my speech and Emily Garvin for copy editing the final draft.

      Recognition

      The following is an edited version of a presentation made at IBS—the Academy of Economics of the Russian Federation—on November 14, 2008. Dr. Adizes is the honorary scientific advisor to IBS, from which he received an honorary doctorate in 2007.

      A crisis can be a real blessing to any person, to any nation, for all crises bring progress.

      Creativity is born from anguish, just as the day is born from the dark night.

      It is in crisis that inventiveness, discoveries, and grand strategies are born.

      He who overcomes crisis overcomes himself, without himself being overcome.

      He who blames his failure on a crisis neglects his own talent, and is more respectful of problems than of solutions.

      The true crisis is the crisis of incompetence.

      The greatest fault of both people and nations is the laziness with which they attempt to find the solutions to their problems.

      There is no challenge without crisis.

      And without challenges, life becomes a routine, a slow death.

      Without crisis, there is no merit. It’s in a crisis that we can show the very best in us, because without crises every wind becomes a mere caress.

      To speak about a crisis is to promote it, and yet to be silent about a crisis is to promote conformity.

      Let us work hard instead. Let us stop, once and for all, the crisis of our tragic unwillingness to overcome challenges.

Albert Einstein

      RIGHT NOW, IN 2009, the world is in a deep financial crisis. It affects everyone, particularly companies that are undergoing a transformation into an increasingly competitive economy and experiencing rapid and continual economic, political, and technological changes: companies that must have access to credit in order to continue developing.

      In general, people don’t like crises. Although the dictionary meaning of “crisis” is an upheaval or turning point that causes a decisive change—for worse or for better—the word usually has a negative connotation. When people hear the word “crisis,” they automatically assume it’s a disaster. Most people dread crises, and that goes even more for managers of organizations, who must worry about protecting their organizations’ existence.

      But it doesn’t have to be that way. And here is why.

      Let us start with an analogy. You probably remember that back when you were a child, your parents told you, “Do not take a hot shower and then go outside in the cold weather! You will catch a cold!” Well, I always wondered why I would catch a cold if I went outside with wet hair in freezing temperatures, while in Finland and Russia people like to go to the sauna, sweat, then go outside and roll in the snow. It makes them feel invigorated! Some people in Siberia, including the aged, dig a hole in the ice on a lake or river, then dive into the freezing water—and they also feel invigorated! If I did that I would probably get pneumonia and die.

      Why the difference?

      What we have to realize is that it’s not the cold that makes us sick. It is the rapid change from hot to cold. But that still doesn’t explain why people in Finland become invigorated by the quick change from hot to cold, while the same change makes me sick.

      It’s all about the strength, or lack of strength, of your organism. If your organism is robust, change makes you stronger. But if you’re weak, change can kill you.

      This phenomenon does not apply only to people but to organizations, too. Organizations that are prepared to deal with change are invigorated by it. Those that are not fall ill and risk bankruptcy.

      What does it mean to have a “strong organism”? Does it mean to have big muscles? No. It means that the organism is strong enough to deal with change. It is strength not of physique but of the capacity to handle change.

      In order to understand what it means to have a strong organization that is capable of handling change, we should first discuss how change causes organizational “diseases.” By understanding the causes of problems created by change, we will be able to identify the appropriate remedy.

      Change is nothing new. Change has been here forever, for billions of years. What is new is that the rate of change is accelerating, faster СКАЧАТЬ