Jonathan Rosenberg Rules for Success
Just saw a great video by Jonathan Rosenberg. I enjoyed his listed so much that I decided to jot them down to reference.
Rules for Communication
- Over communicate in all ways all the time
- Openly share everything with your colleagues
- Repetition does not spoil the prayer
- Each word matters. Be crisp and direct and choose each word wisely.
- Great leaders are great teachers. And great teachers are great storytellers. Narrative is what matters.
- As leaders you learn more by listening than by talking.
- If you must talk, ask questions. People learn more from your questions than your answers.
- If you actually know the answer in a business situation, stop listening by all mean and talk! Back up your answer with data.
- Strive to respond to email instantly.
Rules for Company Culture
- Avoid hippos (highest paid person’s opinion)
- You should not be able to figure out the org char by looking at a product
- Help the organizations crush bureaucracy in all forms
- When you are trying to accomplish something, ask for a winning strategy and the tactics needed to win. On their own, strategy and tactics don’t produce winners. You need both.
- People or more production if they are crowded.
- Empower the smallest of teams. A small team can often do more than a big one.
- Working from home is malignant, metastasizing cancer.
- Engineers and product managers and complexity, marketing adds management layers, sales adds coordinators.
- Knights are knights and knaves are knaves.
- Organizations will elide import details. So you must verify every assertion made.
- Focus on values rather than costs. Spend 80% of your time on 80% of your revenue stream.
- Never, never suggest copying the competitor.
- Hope is not a plan.
- Success breeds the green-eyed monster.
- Do all reorganization in a day. 24 hours.
Rules for Hiring and Development
- Know how to interview well
- Great people attract great people.
- Managers don’t hire people. Committees hire people.
- Instead of laying off the bottom 10%, don’t hire them.
- Don’t hire specialists, especially in high tech.
- You cannot teach passion.
- Urgency of the role isn’t sufficiently important to compromise quality in hiring.
- Identify and purge the bad eggs.
- Diversity is your best defense against myopia.
- You can’t pump the management training program.
- Life is not fair. Disproportionately reward risk takers and performance.
- Build around the people who have the most impact.
Rules for Decision Making
- Decision is about consensus not unanimity.
- There’s consensus without descent.
- If there’s doubt about what to do, consider your customers perspective
- Choose your goals wisely.
- None of us is a smart as all of us.
- Where the is harmony, there is no innovation.
Rules to Foster Innovation
- Innovation comes from creativity. Creativity cannot be managed.
- Create a culture of “yes” based on optimism and big thinking.
- Never stop someone from moving forward with their good idea because you have a better one.
- A leader’s job is not to prevent risk but to build the capabilities when failures occur.
- A good crisis is a terrible thing to waste.
- Many management challenges are teaching moments
Rules for Humility
- Learn something new so you remember how difficult it is to learn
- Never stop learning.
- Humility is correlated with age. Arrogance is inversely correlated with age.
- You get person leverage trough empowerment, delegation, and inspection.
- Judgement comes with experience and experience comes with errors.
- Smart people can smell hypocrisy.
- Don’t burn bridges.
- Would you work for yourself?
- Write a self review and be critical of yourself.
- Communicate, confess, comply, when you make a mistake.