From taxi rides, hotel stays, car driving, to communicating and paying, everything we knew as normal has changed beyond recognition. To lead effectively in today’s brave new world, you have to question EVERYTHING. For the first time in human history, knowledge is free and almost every boundary to communication has been lifted. This open source world has permanently altered the business landscape. And you can count on the fact that the pace of change will only accelerate. Yet... companies still rely on management tools and practices that were, at best, mildly effective in their heyday. In Open Source Leadership, Rajeev Peshawaria reveals the vision, insight, and practices he has used to help some of today’s largest and most influential organizations meet the open source world head on. It all starts with asking the right questions: What’s the most effective leadership style in a world of 24/7 connectivity? How has the very concept of leadership changed in the open source era? How do you inspire and reward performance in the “gig economy?” How do you measure engagement and effectively address the gaps? How can you lead innovation--quickly and continuously? Peshawaria reveals the answers to these questions--and they will surprise you. Based on his company’s groundbreaking research spanning 28 countries, he concludes that traditional industrial age thinking needs a massive upgrade to successfully navigating the brave new world of business. Open Source Leadership rewrites the rules of management, giving you a unique look at the most common misperceptions, illusions, and downright wrong information you’ve been getting about what works and what doesn’t. It provides a new, counterintuitive model for seizing competitive edge in any industry. Among other issues the book argues convincingly that “positive autocracy” must replace democratic leadership; talent and innovation are abundant not scarce; early identification of high-potentials is counter-productive; and setting employees free to do as little as they want will increase productivity.
This is a story of reinvention.
A blueprint for scalable and sustainable open source projects John Mertic. 13. Transitioning. Leadership. “The greatest leader is not necessarily the one who does the greatest things. He is the one that gets the people to do the greatest ...
Not just for developers who are considering starting their own free software project, this book will also help those who want to participate in the process at any level.
In the active support phase, work can seem similar to the development phase. In addition to fixing bugs, projects often add smaller features. You wouldn't make incompatible changes or significantly update the user interface, ...
Free and Open Source Enterprise Resource Planning: Systems and Strategies unites research on FOS-ERP, comparing differences with proprietary Enterprise Resource Planning products, and demonstrating key research factors.
With their accessible approach, these books will help you get quickly up-to-speed on a topic so that you can effectively compete, grow, and better serve your customers.
... leadership style is newtomany; mistakeshave tobe experiencedandadmitted and experiments allowed. Wehave called this “transition leadership.” Open source leadership: Reasonsfor hopeor despair? So whatis next?Don Tapscott and Anthony ...
5th IFIP WG 2.13 International Conference on Open Source Systems, OSS 2009, Skövde, Sweden, June 3-6, 2009 ... leadership, culture, and participation will make it easier to accomplish user research tasks in FLOSS projects. If ...
Explaining Open Source: Macro-Organization 7. Business Models and the Law 8. The Code That Changed the World? Notes Index Reviews of this book: In the world of open-source software, true believers can be a fervent bunch.
Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications Management Association, Information Resources ... in the current global information society, there is the need to equip them with the necessary information and digital literacy skills so ...