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Testimonial: sr manager - global resources company
I enjoyed reading your book - at first I was a bit daunted by the abstract themes and concepts (being an engineer!), but the more I read, the more it all made sense. I even used some of the information about rights at our safety meeting, with some surprising results. We had a recent fatality where a contractor disobeyed instructions and went for a walk after hours outside the camp and was killed by a pack of wild animals. My question was whether this chap was within his rights to do this, and were his rights aligned to the organisation! Well, with about 30 people attending, the emotion and variation in views on this subject was amazing - feedback after was that there were a number of follow up meetings to discuss the subject further! This certainly reinforced to me the importance of the subject you address, and it seems one that company leadership skirts around. I have passed my copy onto a the gentleman who was at the meeting who is responsible for developing the business excellence model for the company.
Testimonial: Australian Packaging / Recycling Magnate
... your book ... contains many valuable insights into good leadership ...
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Here is an easy to read short novel about a CEO learning to align the culture of a business to dealing with sustainability issues. Written in a simple narrative style, The Sustainable Way presents a framework based on the findings of practical research conducted with CEOs from a range of large and medium sized organisations.
These CEOs ran petrochemical, manufacturing, serivce, business, education and hospitality organisations. Despite the diversity, it was shown that they all followed a similar pattern. In short, they all re-aligned the culture of their business to deal with sustainability issues. They did this by adjusting four components.
Information about the book.
here for press release.
Buy the book.
Dr Boxer has been committed to helping organisations reduce and eliminate pollution. In the late 1980s he worked with an Australian building product corporation to introduce some basic problem solving techniques. After working with about ten factory workers and their managers the effort he facilitated resulted in a $200,000 annual saving of resin and a total elimination of toxic emissions. When their EPA representative was asked why they had not been contacted in over a year the EPA representative told them the problem had been solved. When they asked why they were not told the EPA representative said, ?I thought you would have known.? Some more details of this and other similar outcomes are explained in this 1991 article.
Often the sustainable way is more about helping people understand than telling them what to do. The understanding begins with top management; often those people doing the work already understand the sustainable way. The sustainable way requires self reflection about rights, duties, the moral order and actions.
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