What the CEO Wants You to Know : How Your Company Really Works
What the CEO Wants You to Know : How Your Company Really Works book cover

What the CEO Wants You to Know : How Your Company Really Works

Hardcover – February 13, 2001

Price
$14.77
Format
Hardcover
Pages
141
Publisher
Crown Business
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0609608395
Dimensions
5.4 x 0.7 x 8.3 inches
Weight
9.2 ounces

Description

Ram Charan learned about business from his family's shoe shop in India before attending Harvard Business School and going on to advise senior executives in companies large and small. His experiences taught him that universal laws apply "whether you sell fruit from a stand or are running a Fortune 500 company," and that the business acumen that comes from understanding these basics can be applied throughout any operation. What the CEO Wants You to Know is Charan's primer on this point, which he illustrates with explanations filtered through the eyes of street venders and other small shopkeepers. One, for example, involves a woman in Managua, Nicaragua, who sells clothing from a small cart and beats the oppressive interest rates on her loans and the puny profit margins on her goods with a skillfully selected inventory that is quickly and repeatedly turned over. Whether it's a corner merchant or a giant manufacturing concern, Charan notes, "the faster the velocity, the higher the return." Relating such thinking to cash generation, customer satisfaction, and other essentials, he describes the universal principles that help all companies make money. "What your CEO wants you to know is how these fundamentals of business work in your company," he writes before embarking on a very lucid explanation that can be quickly absorbed and put into practice. -- Howard Rothman From Publishers Weekly Charan (Boards at Work), a consultant, draws an analogy between the decision-making processes of the CEO and the street vendor in his native India. The vendor must focus on profit margin, returns and customer demands. CEOs must "Think like the street vendor. Cut through to the nucleus of the business." Successful leaders, says Charan, aren't afraid to seek help---from coaches, colleagues or employees. With its friendly, conversational tone, this book will be useful to some readers on the lower and middle rungs, but may prove too simplistic for aspiring CEOs. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From Booklist Charan is a busy consultant and "leadership coach" who writes for such publications as Fortune and Harvard Business Review . He is also the author of Boards That Work (1998) and a coauthor of Every Business Is a Growth Business (1998) and the just-released Leadership Pipeline (2001). Now, with this short, basic primer on how companies work, he targets younger people who may want to know more about the world of business and employees who seek a better understanding of how their company is organized and how and why decisions are made. Charan suggests that certain business principles are invariable and that both the successful fruit-cart vendor and the successful seven-figure CEO who understand these principles possess what he calls "business acumen." He explains the concept of profit and demonstrates how companies are organized around that concept. Charan's goals are to help employees figure out their company's three most important priorities, understand how their company creates wealth, and understand "how to become a total businessperson by linking [their] job[s] with the big picture of [the] company." David Rouse Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved " What the CEO Wants You to Know is a book that should be read by everyone-from the newest recruit to the most seasoned senior manager."— Jac Nasser, CEO and President, Ford Motor Company"These ideas help simplify complexity and provide a lifetime of value. What the CEO Wants You to Know is a gem of a book."— Larry Bossidy, former Chairman and CEO, AlliedSignal"This is a book that's been needed for years. Ram Charan shares the secret to finding your way in the business world and making your career more meaningful."— Chad Holliday, Chairman and CEO, Dupont"Reading this book is like putting on a pair of glasses-suddenly the guts of the business are crystal clear."— Dave Robino, Vice Chairman, Gateway Computer"Finally, a book that shows how business really works."— Bob Nardelli, President and CEO, GE Power Systems"Business acumen-Ram Charan's term for using the universal laws of business — is the name of the game today."— Lois D. Juliber, COO, Colgate-Palmolive From the Inside Flap The universal laws of business success . . . no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company.Have you ever noticed that the business savvy of the world's best CEOs seems like a kind of street smarts? They sense where the opportunities are and how to take advantage of them. And their companies make money consistently, year after year.How different is it to run a big company than to sell fruit from a cart or run a small shop in a village? In essence, not very, according to Ram Charan. From his childhood in India, where he worked in his family's shoe shop, to his education at Harvard Business School and his daily work advising many of the world's best CEOs, Ram understands business as few can.The best CEOs have a knack for bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals -- the same fundamentals of the family shoe shop. They have business acumen -- the ability to focus on the basics and make money for the company. What the CEO Wants You to Know captures these insights and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great CEOs do instinctively and persistently: * Understand the basic building blocks of a business and use them to figure out how your company makes money and operates as a total business.* Decide what to do, despite the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. Many people spend more than a hundred thousand dollars on an MBA without learning to pull these pieces of the puzzle together. Many others lack a formal business education and feel shut out from the executive suite. What the CEO Wants You to Know takes the mystery out of business and shows the secrets of success used by business legends like Jack Welch of GE. "What the CEO Wants You to Know is a book that should be read by everyone-from the newest recruit to the most seasoned senior manager."-- Jac Nasser, CEO and President, Ford Motor Company"These ideas help simplify complexity and provide a lifetime of value. What the CEO Wants You to Know is a gem of a book."-- Larry Bossidy, former Chairman and CEO, AlliedSignal"This is a book that's been needed for years. Ram Charan shares the secret to finding your way in the business world and making your career more meaningful."-- Chad Holliday, Chairman and CEO, Dupont"Reading this book is like putting on a pair of glasses-suddenly the guts of the business are crystal clear."-- Dave Robino, Vice Chairman, Gateway Computer"Finally, a book that shows how business really works."-- Bob Nardelli, President and CEO, GE Power Systems"Business acumen-Ram Charan's term for using the universal laws of business -- is the name of the game today."-- Lois D. Juliber, COO, Colgate-Palmolive Ram Charan is a highly sought adviser to CEOs and senior executives in companies ranging from start-ups to the Fortune 500, including GE, Ford, DuPont, EDS, Universal Studios, and Verizon. He is the author of Boards That Work and the coauthor of Every Business Is a Growth Business and E-Board Strategies . Dr. Charan has written numerous articles for Harvard Business Review and other publications, including the Fortune cover story "Why CEOs Fail."He has a D.B.A and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School and has taught at Harvard and Northwestern. He won the best teacher award at Northwestern's Kellogg School and was recently elected a Fellow of the National Academy of Human Resources. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1What Jack Welch and Street Vendors ShareThe Essence of Business ThinkingChances are that sometime in your life you passed through a city or town where people were selling goods from tables and carts right there on the street. Anywhere you go in the world, you can find street vendors hawking their wares. In Chicago, Mexico City, São Paulo, Bombay, Barcelona, San Francisco, New York. Anywhere.If you bought something, you probably made your purchase quickly and went on your way. It didn't occur to you to talk to the street vendors about business. After all, what they do is very simple. What could you possibly learn from them?But if you did talk with street vendors about how they make a living, you would notice something surprising. No matter where they live, what they sell, or what culture they come from, they talk about-and think about-their business in remarkably similar ways. They speak a universal language of business. They practice a universal law of business.Even more surprising is that the street vendor's language is the same as Jack Welch's language (he's the chief executive officer of General Electric Company, named the best manager of the century by Fortune magazine) and Michael Dell's language (you've heard of Dell Computer) and Jac Nasser's language (CEO of Ford). It's the same as Jorma Ollila's (CEO of the Finnish company Nokia) and Nobuyuki Idei's (CEO of Sony).In other words, when it comes to running a business successfully, the street vendor and the CEOs of some of the world's largest and most successful companies talk and think very much alike. There are differences, of course, between running a huge corporation and a small shop, and we'll get to those, but the fundamentals, or basics, of business are the same. People like Jack Welch, Michael Dell, and Jac Nasser manage and lead large numbers of people in huge, global organizations. They are often referred to as managers or leaders, but they think of themselves as businesspeople first, not unlike street vendors.I know because I've been permitted to observe some of these business leaders and others like them firsthand. For more than three decades, I have had the privilege of working one-on-one with some of the most successful business leaders in the world, including Larry Bossidy, formerly of AlliedSignal; Dick Brown of EDS; John Cleghorn of Royal Bank of Canada; Chad Holliday of DuPont; Jac Nasser of Ford; John Reed, formerly of Citigroup; and Jack Welch of GE. I have seen the way their minds work, the way they cut through the largest and most complex issues to the fundamentals of business.I learned those fundamentals as a child growing up in a small agricultural town in northern India. There I watched my father and uncle struggle to make a living selling shoes from their small shop, a joint family enterprise. With no experience and no formal training, they competed head to head against others in the town who were also trying to eke out a living. My family learned, and over time they built a name brand and earned the trust of the local farmers, who were their customers. Other shops have come and gone, but ours has flourished, and my nephews continue to run the shop to this day.That shoe shop paid for my education and allowed me to venture far beyond my roots. At the age of nineteen, with an engineering degree in hand, I took a job at a gas utility company in Sydney, Australia. The CEO discovered that I had a nose for business, and I soon found myself devising marketing plans and pricing strategies instead of designing pipeline networks. My interest in business proved to be irrepressible, and that CEO encouraged me to go to Harvard Business School, where I earned an MBA and a doctorate, and where I later taught. Since then, I have had the opportunity to advise dozens of CEOs around the world and to teach business to thousands more.In my early days of consulting, as I worked with businesses of different sizes, in different industries and different cultures, I was struck by the similarities among successful business leaders. I saw that regardless of the size or type of business, a good CEO had a way of bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals-the same fundamentals I learned in the family shoe shop.My experiences over the past few decades have convinced me beyond doubt that the same universal principles, or laws, underlie every business, from the street vendor's business, to the shoe shop, to the businesses run from the executive suites of the Fortune 50. The most successful business leaders never lose sight of the basics. Their intense focus on the fundamentals of business is, in fact, the secret to their success. Like the street vendor, they have a keen sense of how a business makes money. This ability to apply the universal laws of business is what I call business acumen.Remember Your RootsMany successful CEOs have had experiences early in their lives similar to that of a street vendor, giving root to their business thinking. Jac Nasser of Ford first made his living in his family's small business. Think of the challenges a small business owner faces. He has to decide what customers to try to attract and how to draw them in, what items to provide and how to price them, what raw ingredients to buy and how much to pay for them, what kind of atmosphere to offer and how to create it, and he has to put in long, long hours. If he makes a profit, saves some money, and has the right people around him, he can grow the business. Every decision matters.The family business is where Jac Nasser learned the universal language of business and first tested his business acumen. He now speaks the same language at Ford, the second-largest automotive company in the world.Do you speak the universal language of business? Do you understand the fundamental laws that underlie every business? Do you have business acumen?Chances are, you've built your career in one area of your company, such as sales, finance, or production. These areas, generally known as business functions, are sometimes also called chimneys or silos. That's because most people take their first job at a corporation in one business function and move up within that function as they get promoted. Thus it appears as if they're moving vertically through a chimney or silo.Such career tracks tend to narrow your perspective and influence the decisions and trade-offs you make every day. What's best for your department or function is not necessarily best for the company as a whole. You may be a top-notch professional-good at marketing or engineering or financial analysis-but are you really a businessperson? Regardless of your job, department, or chimney, you need to develop your business acumen.As you learn to see your company as a total business and make decisions that enhance its overall performance, you will help make meetings less bureaucratic, more focused on the business issues. Time will go quickly, as it does when discussions are constructive and energizing. You'll get more excited about your job because you'll see that your suggestions and decisions help the business grow and prosper. You'll have a greater sense of purpose, and your capacity will increase.Developing your business acumen will make you feel rejuvenated, like when you were a kid having fun making money for the first time-or like Michael Dell, who instinctively focused on the right things and created tremendous value for shareholders. Fifteen years ago, he was running a mail-order computer business out of his college dorm room. In June 2000, Dell Computer was worth some $130 billion.When you learn to speak the universal language of business, you can have meaningful discussions with anyone in the company, at any level. You'll tear down the walls that separate you, a functional chimney person, from those well-dressed senior executives and MBAs who speak a language you may not understand. You'll feel more connected to your company and your work. And the range of opportunities open to you will expand.Use this book to learn the language of business. Then put the book aside and practice until the fundamentals of business become instinctive, as they are for the street vendor. You'll discover the common sense of business, and you'll be on your way to developing business acumen.The Street Vendor's SkillHow does a street vendor hawking fruits and vegetables in a small Indian town make a living? Someone with a $75,000 education and an MBA might say "Anticipate demand." But the street vendor in India doesn't know the buzz words. He just has to figure out what to buy that morning-what quantity, what quality, and what assortment of fruits and vegetables-based on what he thinks he can sell that day (his sales forecast).Then he has to figure out what prices to charge and be nimble enough to adjust prices as needed during the day. He doesn't want to carry the fruit (the inventory) home with him. If it begins to decay, it will be ofless value tomorrow. Another reason why the vendor doesn't want anything left over is that he needs the cash. All day long he has to weigh whether to cut prices, when to cut them, and by how much. If he is indecisive or makes a wrong trade-off, he may lose out.It is no different in companies. Say the Federal Reserve (the Fed) increases interest rates. Demand for automobiles might suddenly drop, and automotive companies might not be able to adjust their production levels quickly enough. They might end up with more inventory than they need. It would then take heroic efforts to dispose of the inventory and collect the cash. That's when consumers would start seeing TV commercials telling them that one of the car companies is offering cash rebates. Rebates and increased spending on advertising hurt profits. Also, such selling approaches can begin to cheapen the image of the brand. Companies sometimes endure those negative effects because they need the cash.Each morning, the street vendor sets up his cart. He puts the best-looking fruit in the front (retailers call this merchandising). He watches the competition-what they're selling and for how much. And the whole time, he's thinking about not just today but also tomorrow.If he has trouble selling his produce, he might have to cut the price (increase the value to the customer) or rearrange the display or yell louder (advertise) to attract attention to his stand. Maybe tomorrow he'll find a better price at which to buy or he'll change the assortment of fruits and vegetables (the product mix). If something doesn't work, he adjusts.How does he know if he's doing well? If he has cash in his pocket at the end of the day. Everyone understands cash, money in the pocket. Every language has a word for this. The street vendor constantly thinks about cash-does he have enough cash, how can he get more cash, will he continue to be able to generate cash?What happens to the street vendor who doesn't have cash at the end of the day? It's misery all over. The tension in the family is almost unbearable. The wage earner loses face. And yes, it's true; in India, his family may not have enough to eat. Such circumstances put the mind into sharp focus. But whether the street vendor realizes it or not, his subconscious is pondering something deeper. How will he buy goods for the next day? He needs cash to stay in business.So do companies. You hear all the time about companies that are strapped for cash. They may have produced too many things that didn't sell and the cash got absorbed in inventories. Or they invested money in a plant that's too big and the company can't generate enough money from it. Or the company sold its products on credit to distributors or retailers and got paid late or not at all. When companies can't generate enough cash, they often borrow it. If they borrow heavily and don't correct the problem that created the need in the first place, they have trouble repaying the loans. Some end up filing for bankruptcy, so-called Chapter 11.Back to the street vendor. How vendors buy fruit varies from country to country. In India, when personal cash savings are hard to accumulate, the vendor may borrow cash to purchase fruit in order to make some more money. To make a living, he has to make enough money to pay back what he borrowed, with some left over.Every time he sells a melon, he makes just a little bit of money. His profit, the difference between what he pays for the fruit and what he sells it for, is very low. His profit margin-the cash he gets to keep as a percentage of the total cash he takes in-is around 5 percent. (Different companies have different terminology for this basic idea. Some call it return on sales or operating margin. You need to know what it is called in your company. But what's important is the idea, which I'll explain more fully later.)Let's say our street vendor borrows 400 rupees (Rs 400, which is about $10). He uses the money as a deposit on Rs 4,000 worth of fruit. The fruit is his only asset. If he sells all Rs 4,000 worth of fruit at a 2 percent profit margin (after deducting all expenses and his salary), he will make a profit of Rs 80. In other words, he used his Rs 400 asset to make Rs 80, so his return on assets is 20 percent.Can the street vendor raise his prices to make more profit? Only so much. If his price is too high, his customers will go to another vendor. Can he find a way to pay less for the fruit? If he buys fruit that's overripe, his customers will know the difference. Maybe some kinds of fruit are more profitable than others. Should he sell only the most profitable ones?In the automotive business in the early 1990s, Ford gained a decisive financial advantage over General Motors by changing its product mix ahead of the competition. Ford was quick to recognize the American consumer's increasing desire for sport utility vehicles and light trucks. While continuing to offer a full range of vehicles, Ford shifted some of its production from cars to SUVs and trucks, which are more profitable than cars. It won the leading market share in North America in these product areas, despite the fact that GM is bigger.The street vendor has many realities to deal with. If he makes the wrong judgment repeatedly, he will find it hard to make a living. If he doesn't give his customers a fair deal, they will not return and he will develop a bad reputation. If, on the other hand, he gives people a good deal every time, he builds their trust and loyalty to his brand. He has to be consumer focused. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • What the CEO Wants You to Know
  • takes the mystery out of business and shows you the secrets of success
  • Have you ever noticed that the business savvy of the world's best CEOs seems like a kind of street smarts? They sense where the opportunities are and how to take advantage of them. And their companies make money consistently, year after year. How different is it to run a big company than to sell fruit from a cart or run a small shop in a village? In essence, not very, according to Ram Charan. From his childhood in India, where he worked in his family's shoe shop, to his education at Harvard Business School and his daily work advising many of the world's best CEOs, Ram understands business as few can. The best CEOs have a knack for bringing the most complex business down to the fundamentals--the same fundamentals that are used to run the family shoe shop. And, they have business acumen--the ability to focus on the basics and make money for the company.
  • What the CEO Wants You to Know
  • captures these insights and explains in clear, simple language how to do what great CEOs do instinctively and persistently: * Understand the basic building blocks of a business and use them to figure out how your company makes money and operates as a total business. * Decide what to do, despite the clutter of day-to-day business and the complexity of the real world. Many people spend more than a hundred thousand dollars on an MBA without learning to pull these pieces of the puzzle together. Many others lack a formal business education and feel shut out from the executive suite.
  • What the CEO Wants You to Know
  • provides you with the universal laws of business success, no matter whether you are selling fruit from a stand or running a Fortune 500 company.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

doesn't live up to the title.

The most brilliant thing about this extremely slim volume is it's title. Any ambitious person in a corporate setting will want what the book promises. Unfortunately, the promise is not fulfilled.

One problem is the book is most applicable to retail or manufacturing. The central insight of the book deals with inventory turnover. That may be fine for Dell Computers, but CEOs of companies that develop software don't care about inventory, because there is none. The entire service/information economy is more or less ignored.

Overall I found the book interesting and worthwhile. But if you strip away the folksy tales about fruit vendors in the third world and anecdotes about the CEO of Ford, what you have left is a short pamphlet.

I would guess this book contains information my CEO would probably would want me to know. But I am pretty sure my CEO would want me to know a whole lot more than whats in this book.
32 people found this helpful
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Fundamentals!!!

I have to laugh every time I hear about some CEO or manager that has passed out, to their employees, "Who Moved My Cheese." My money is with the company that passes this book out to their employees.
It's nothing we haven't learned in business school or during our MBA studies-basic business fundamentals. Ram, however, pulls all these concepts together, quite elegantly, and reminds us that these fundamental concepts should be our focus if we want a strong viable company. I throughly enjoyed it. An easy 2-Hour read.
17 people found this helpful
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Dangerously Oversimplified and Misleading

This is the first book I've picked from the ChangeThis "Personal MBA" list ([...]) and boy am I disappointed.

I thought this primer-level introduction to business would give me the tools I needed to understand the nuts & bolts of Collins and Lazier's *Running the Small to Mid-Sized Business* but no such luck.

He gives us a taste of the math that is required to understand business, but I guess he's afraid of scaring people off with too much math, because it's glossed over in such a way as to be unusable. It's like sex without penetration.

And right now I'm reading a section where he says, "Obviously, the higher the P-E multiple, the more wealth is created."

By that logic, all those overvalued internet stocks during the dot com bubble created a lot of wealth. And so did Enron.

I hope the other books on the "Personal MBA" list are better than this.
11 people found this helpful
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Very Basic Business Book - 5 Stars

This book is one of the most simple business books to read and I would highly recommend it to those that are looking to understand how businesses operate. I believe this book would be highest valued by those without extensive business backgrounds and by others that are seeking to understand why some companies are great whereas others are average. Mr. Charan explains the most important element of businesses, generating cash. He then talks about numerous business concepts at a very basic level, which I think would help everyone (including MBAs and CEOs). At 150 pages or so it is an easy read and can be read quickly for those seeking information quickly.
I personally have a degree in accounting, an MBA in finance and I worked in corporate strategy. I found this book definitely worth the while and ranks up in the top 2 of overall general business books I have read. I am just now starting to put my reviews online.
10 people found this helpful
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The reason why a lemonade stand can not be scaled into a real business...or a book

This book starts out great: explaining the essential need for business acumen, the skill to reduce business to basic concepts, rules applicable to any scale and any area. The metaphor of fruit street vendor is used to explain cash generation, return on assets (margin and velocity) and growth. So far so good.

Then the author attempts to scale this up. Figuring out business priorities and managing the P/E multiple is next. I have to disagree with too much emphasis on keeping investors happy. All too often the interests of the investors are opposite to the business interest. (Try to accumulate cash and "advocates" are crying out for dividend increase or share buyback.) A CEO may need to keep investors happy, but a business owner should not. A share price should not be the sole measure of management success.

Managing personnel problems, "mismatches", hand holding and coaching, social operating mechanisms are discussed next. While Jacques Nasser is mentioned as somewhat of a business hero, his tenure as CEO of Ford was not exactly a shining example of an effective or charismatic leader. Then comes Dick Brown as CEO of DES. His attempt to transform the ailing company is described as a the ability to list clear and simple business priorities. Among them "Reducing cost by $ 1 billion and thus improving margin." How this was attempted is not described. His career at the company could not be described as glorious, either.

The problem is that once the skeleton metaphor of business is discussed, the book attempts to build an oversize body around it. A corporation around the fruit stand, in essence. For once, here we could have started to read about relevant differences: say, the real estate where the stand stands on (rent or own, interest rates, etc). A corporation is not there to keep its employees happy, but to hold them accountable and productive assisting the overall success of the business. Here we could have read about performance evaluation, dashboards, whatever. (A family business operates differently than a real business.) Here everything seems wobbly: the sample CEOs are not great examples, there are no descriptions of good business histories, true turnarounds or even failures due to basic principles violated.
9 people found this helpful
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why grow your business acumen?

It is humbling. After B-School and hundreds of business books, it took these 150 or so pages of text lay explain why I spent time learning finance and accounting, marketing, communications and leadership: To build my business acumen. And Mr. Charan makes it clear that business acumen drives all businesses, be they apple carts or multi-nationals.

How simple is Charan's exposition on building business acumen?

-Finance and operations management are boiled down to one equation (R=M*V). As basic as it gets.

-And marketing gets covered just as simply: "Do they like my fruit? If customers cleared me out of bananas but I have apples left, should I abandon apples and specialize in bananas?"

- Leadership is getting people to focus on the important drivers of wealth generation: cash, velocity, and margins. The best leaders cut through the complexity of their businesses, and get their employees entirely focused on these fundamentals.

But do not be fooled by the brevity. This book is actually quite rigorous. Of course, you will still need spreadsheets and inventory management software and SAS to mine data in this increasingly complex world. Charan does not deny this, but cuts through the complexity so you can see how it all fits together. And that is business acumen, the knowledge and understanding of which will enrich any job you do.
7 people found this helpful
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Looking for business sense?

After reading this book, I'd have to say that I did come away from it with more information than when I started with. Specifically concepts like ROA, asset velocity, and inventory control have become more clearly defined in my mind. The book does a good job of conveying these concepts.
I work for a wall street brokerage firm, so in some regards, many of the topics discussed here do not apply. Firstly, this company is quite focused on public companies with open financials. Public companies have expectations to meet that are set by the public, to some extent. Private companies have expectations that are set by the participating shareholders, which is naturally a smaller set of people as it does not benefit from widespread ownership of the company.
Next, the author discusses P/E heavily. He defines it thoroughly (painful for me, since I know what it is). He talks about P/E expansion and contraction in response to company performance. I do not agree, I think P/E generalizations are short term observations, as we have seen from the dot-com craze. In addition, the E in P/E is specified by GAAP defined earnings in public companies. Anyone who knows anything about accounting will realize that accounting is a loose science.
Next, I am disappointed in the authors unwillingness to focus on the ability for CEOs to empower their subordinates. The author quotes CEO letters to subordinates in which the CEO utilizes a harsh authoritative tone. Of course this may work with some companies, although I believe that if the author truly believes that one of the CEO's goals is to introduce new energy into the corporation, then the CEO will empower his employees and work with them to set the direction of their companies. The letters quoted show me a CEO who does not understand people and what people require, they require that they feel important by utilizing positive energies.
5 people found this helpful
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Life on the Street

What the CEO wants you to know cuts through much of the complexity surrounding business. Basics topics such as cash, margin, velocity, growth and customers are addressed. They are addresses from the stand point of a street vendor. The street vendor has to have an understanding of cash, margin, velocity (how often inventory is turned over) and what customers want.
What the CEO wants you to know is a very easy and quick read. It brings together a lot of the basic factors that affect a business operation. What the CEO wants you to know views these basic factors as a whole with a perspective on how they interact.
What the CEO wants you to know is a good get back to the basics that matter for the business executive. For any employee this book is a good view in what top management should be considering and how you can impact the company's top and bottom line (the book also covers what these terms mean). I recommend this book.
5 people found this helpful
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Insightful

I read this book in one sitting, which most of you who read this book will. Being a MBA graduate who has drudged through several business courses and books, I was glad to see something that puts it all in a really simple perspective.

The top things I took from this book are:

1. Cash Flow, ROA = M*V, Growth are fundamental to every business

2. Business vs. People - you need others to get the job done, even if you are a street vendor

3. The letters from the CEO to the VPs were very educational - the best part of my education from this book. I am looking for other published "letters from the CEO" - and I am talking not to all employees (like the ones by Dick Brown, I was one of the employees who felt no extra connection from his emails!), but pointed letters saying what needs to be done like the ones from the book.
4 people found this helpful
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New corporate managers and young entrepreneurs reading list

This is a concise and quick read that should really be targetd to the new first line manager, supervisor or young entrepreneur. Although written in a simple and obvious advice format, there are a lot of middle managers out there that still need these fundamentals also. I would recommend using this book as a required reading and discussion book with all first time leaders in your company.
Charan depicts the key issues of running a corporation to the same gut instincts of running a business in India...everyday cut throat competition for cash...turn it fast!
I also support his views on addressing frankly the leadership development issues of your employees. However, I did not think he was thorough enough in the coaching of employees section as his only examples were to fire those that struggled. One of the great challenges in managing leaders is putting them in developmental positions and giving them the tools/coaching to succeed. I find his recommendations lean to a failure in dealing with leaders that may have struggled without the necessary preparation or tools.
Overall, this primer book is a recommended book for my new leaders and I would recommend this as a light read on your next three hour business trip...
4 people found this helpful