The Most Effective Organization in the U.S.: Leadership Secrets of the Salvation Army - Hardcover

Watson, Robert A.; Brown, Ben

 
9780609608692: The Most Effective Organization in the U.S.: Leadership Secrets of the Salvation Army

Inhaltsangabe

Using the model of the Salvation Army for doing business, this leadership guide explains how businesses can learn a valuable lesson from the Army in terms of organizational effectiveness, strategy, and doing business with a sense of purpose and mission. 50,000 first printing.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Robert A. Watson has served as a commissioned officer in The Salvation Army for forty-four years, four of them as National Commander, the highest-ranking officer in the United States. In his role as national commander, Commissioner Watson oversaw a vast non-profit operation reaching into every community in the country, generating over $2billion in revenues and involving some 3.2 million officers, employees and volunteers. Commissioner Watson has served on over twenty national and international boards, including the Vice President's Coalition on Welfare to Work. He has represented The Salvation Army in sessions before Congress, at the White House and with other world leaders in the business and the non-profit community. <br><br>Ben Brown, a veteran reporter and editor for more than two decades, was a founding staff member of USA Today and founding executive editor of Time, Inc's. Coastal Living magazine. This is his third book.

Aus dem Klappentext

The book about not just business but the meaning of life ... a guide for being the best at what you do and doing it with a sense of purpose that connects with something larger than yourself ...<br><br>For many people, The Salvation Army is most visible between Thanksgiving and Christmas. That's when its officers, soldiers and volunteers, in the ubiquitous Kettle Campaign, make music and collect money for good works. Few realize, however, that the Army is much, much more than this one effort and is in fact a powerhouse of an organization. None other than Peter Drucker called it "the most effective organization in the U.S." Not the most effective nonprofit, but "the most effective organization." Quite a compliment from the world's most preeminent management thinker, especially when you consider that he is comparing The Salvation Army to world-class corporations like General Electric, IBM and Johnson &Johnson. <br><br>Now, Robert Watson, the Army's recently retired national commander, is ready to share the Army's secrets about organization, strategy, and acting with a sense of mission. With its 9,500 centers of operation, $2 billion in annual revenues, and 32 million clients served in every zip code in America, The Salvation Army is the model for doing business with a purpose. As Peter Drucker says, "no one even comes close to it with respect to clarity of mission, ability to innovate, measurable results, dedication and putting money to maximum use":<br>* Clarity of mission: What you can learn from the Army's laser-like focus of evaluating everything it does in terms of its mission of preaching the gospel and meeting human needs without discrimination.<br>* Ability to innovate: How The Salvation Army's investment in people gets incredible returns and why it as much venture capitalist as charity.<br>* Measurable results: Learn The Army's unique ways of setting, monitoring and celebrating the achievement of measurable goals so you, too, can say, "look, we promised we would do this and we delivered."<br>* Dedication: How the Army accomplishes so much with such a small cadre of officers.<br>* Putting Money to Maximum Use: What you can learn from The Army's bare skeleton of a national organization in terms of making the most of your resources and making all of your operations self-sufficient.<br><br>By demonstrating the power of a sense of purpose combined with organizational effectiveness, this remarkable book has something essential to say to all executives, entrepreneurs, managers, and anyone with the ambition to bring people together to reach a goal.<br><br>Free subscription to the Crown Business E-Newsletter just for signing up, email CrownBusiness@Randomhouse.com

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Chapter 1

THE "BUSINESS" OF THE SALVATION ARMY

We want this to be one of the most important books you'll ever read. It's about the meaning of life.

That's a presumptuous thing to say. But given the mission of The Salvation Army and the needs we sense in the business community, we'd be wasting time if we pretended to be interested in anything less.

What are those needs?

We believe the most important one is for connection with a purpose that's bigger than one person's -- or one organization's -- material ambitions. It's the need for a set of guiding principles, an anchor when everything is in flux.

It's the only way the world makes sense. People cannot be truly happy or productive over the long haul without acknowledging an overarching purpose for their existence and without working to harmonize their lives' efforts toward realizing it.

People often talk about their work lives, their family lives, and their spiritual lives as if they are distinct sectors they must somehow keep in balance. But that way of looking at things doesn't match up with human experience. We cannot be one person at work, another with friends and family, yet another in our relationship with God.

We are, each of us, one person. We live in one world. We are happiest and most productive when we feel the fragments of our lives moving together toward some meaningful, transcendent purpose.

You don't have to think of yourself as a religious person to believe that. You know it intuitively. And the idea is confirmed by social science research and by clinical psychology, where the aims have long been to encourage a healthy reintegration of those fragments and to support reconnections with principles and with people that give meaning to our lives.

You can pretend this fundamental need for spiritual integration is somehow suspended when you go to work. But your heart tells you otherwise. Boundaries between "the business world" and other worlds in which humans strive are as artificial as the distinctions between our separate private selves.

All organizations are composed of people-people who are managers, partners, investors, workers, and clients-who don't abandon their individual needs and hopes when they come together in a group. You can have the fanciest title, the best salary, the most lavish perquisites. You can enjoy the highest esteem from colleagues and the respect of competitors. But if you don't feel as if your efforts are pointed at something bigger and more important than quarterly earnings or year-end bonuses, if you don't feel you're building a legacy beyond the money you've made or the possessions you've piled up, you're going to be haunted by what's missing in your life.

In our work with clients in Salvation Army programs, we see the pathological dimensions of this gap between what humans need and what they too frequently settle for. Many of those who come to us are lost, desperate. They've tried everything to fill the holes in their lives. And while we're committed to helping them face and overcome their problems with alcohol and drugs or with broken relationships, the real secret of our success is getting them to accept responsibility for integrating their hearts, their minds, their souls with transcendent purpose. We help them reconnect.

It's not just those who come to us from the streets, from lives of poverty and deprivation, who need to work through this process. Here, for instance, is how one of our former clients begins his story of re-integration:

At 3:30 on a Saturday afternoon, Marine One, the military helicopter which carries the President of the United States, lifted off the White House south lawn and headed west over the congested Virginia sprawl. Following Route 236, the chopper passed over The Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center, a dormitory for men who could not, or would not, deal with their addiction to alcohol or drugs.

At that precise moment, I was crossing the highway to reach the ARC, where I was a resident. When I heard the familiar sound above, I stopped to absorb the sight and immediately felt deeply ashamed of what I had allowed alcohol to do to my life. After all, I had been an occasional passenger on that very chopper and its larger cousin Air Force One. That heady life of official White House travel and all the perks that went with it rushed to my mind. "How the mighty have fallen," I thought.


This is Bill Rhatican, a former White House official in the Nixon and Ford administrations. After 15 years in and out of various alcohol treatment centers, Rhatican ended up at our residence center in Annandale, Virginia, in 1996.

"When my counselor told me I needed long-term help," he says, "I did not expect the facility to be run by The Salvation Army. That organization, I knew, was for the homeless and the helpless, the roadside wreckage I had passed so many times on my way to some important meeting. And I still wasn't that sick, or so I thought."

From the other beneficiaries' viewpoints, Rhatican had everything-the high-profile job, the money, the house, the adoring family. They had nothing. Yet there they were, together, going through the same program, suffering the same pains of transition and coming to the same conclusions about what was missing in their lives.

It wasn't any easier an experience for Rhatican than it is for clients who come to us from prisons or homeless shelters. He slipped once, violating the rules of total sobriety while he was in the program, and had to wait for the chance to be readmitted. Yet he stuck it out and was ultimately able to achieve what had been impossible for him in all the other programs he'd tried. He stayed clean and sober.

What he found among the other men in the program, the men who were ahead of him in recognizing and developing their spiritual connection, "was serenity and inner peace," says Rhatican. "What they had, I wanted."

You don't have to be at the end of your rope to want that feeling or to recognize when it's missing in your life. Even if you're living out your dreams of professional achievement and material success, even if you've avoided the most dangerous distractions that threaten health and wreck families, you know when you're not paying enough attention to your spiritual needs. Those needs don't wait on the sidelines while you attend to other business. They demand attention.

The Salvation Army is fueled with the energy generated by this fundamental human drive for spiritual connection. Not only do we get our "customers" that way, we also get our officers, our lay people, our employees, our investors, and our volunteers because of the pull of this need to align ourselves with divine purpose and because of the intrinsic rewards that come with that alignment. We all seek serenity and inner peace.

In the coming pages, we're going to explain how we run a $2 billion-a-year, transcontinental organization that serves 30 million customers with a workforce that, by material standards, is vastly underpaid and overworked. The rewards we offer are spiritual ones. Our "pay" is weighted by opportunities for meaningful engagement in challenging arenas and for soul-satisfying service of people in need. And, as we'll demonstrate, that kind of compensation package turns out to be one of the most important ingredients-if not the most important ingredient-in building an effective organization.

Can a charity really teach leaders who have to operate in the "real world" of business?

If we truly believe that we all aspire to achieve our best selves beyond mere material concerns and that the organizations we build are simply extensions of our aspirations, then the difference between for-profit organizations and...

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