Rosabeth Moss Kanter

Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Rosabeth Moss Kanter is a professor of business at Harvard Business School, where she holds the Ernest L. Arbuckle Professorship. In addition she is director and chair of the Harvard University Advanced Leadership Initiative...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBusinesswoman
CountryUnited States of America
involves
My creative process involves that old saying: It's 90% perspiration and only 10% inspiration.
american-businessman family history
Ambivalence about family responsibilities has a long history in the corporate world.
failure persuade yankees
Confidence is contagious, but so is failure. Even the Yankees will lose if you persuade them that they will.
changed large pool talented women
We have a large pool of talented and educated women, and yet workplaces haven't necessarily changed to accommodate the reality of their lives.
american-businessman cheap compete labor united
Cheap labor is not going to be the way we compete in the United States. It's going to be brain power.
aspects business complex financial groups guide happens interact motivate nature people requires running understanding
Business requires understanding financial matters, but management is different from running the financial aspects of the business - it requires understanding complex systems, how they operate, the nature of organisations, what happens when people interact in groups and how to motivate and guide people.
best replicate whatever
When you fail at something, the best thing to do is think back to your successes, and try to replicate whatever you did to make them happen.
admired among developed effective highly history human people respected throughout
Throughout human history, people have developed strong loyalties to traditions, rituals, and symbols. In the most effective organizations, they are not only respected but celebrated. It is no coincidence that the most highly admired corporations are also among the most profitable.
allow alone blocs creates divisions easier hardened people produce resist root structures tenure
Organizational structures that allow divisions and departments to own their turf and people with long tenure to take root creates the same hardened group distinctions as Congressional redistricting to produce homogeneous voting blocs - all of which makes it easier to resist compromise, let alone collaboration.
business companies decades few knowledge level several
I see the level of sophistication and knowledge about business growing dramatically. Several decades ago, only a few companies thought about international business.
across cause common cultural efforts ethnic forge identities members people reflects separate suspicious undermines
Tribalism reflects strong ethnic or cultural identities that separate members of one group from another, making them loyal to people like them and suspicious of outsiders, which undermines efforts to forge common cause across groups.
audience image work
The creative process for me doesn't work as well without an image of an audience in mind.
almost streak
It's almost impossible to break a losing streak on your own.
associated based biases categories convenient form human items people playing respond scientists social sort
Some social scientists say that in-group/out-group biases are hard-wired into the human brain. Even without overt prejudice, it is cognitively convenient for people to sort items into categories and respond based on what is usually associated with those categories: a form of statistical discrimination, playing the odds.