How to Become CEO: The Rules for Rising to the Top of Any Organization

How to Become CEO: The Rules for Rising to the Top of Any Organization

by Jeffrey J. Fox
How to Become CEO: The Rules for Rising to the Top of Any Organization

How to Become CEO: The Rules for Rising to the Top of Any Organization

by Jeffrey J. Fox

Hardcover(1 ED)

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Overview

In How to Become CEO, consultant Jeffrey Fox has written an insightful handbook of traits to develop for all generations of CEO aspirants - or for anyone who wants to get ahead in today's business world. Open it to any page and find a short, provocative piece of brutally honest advice written in a conversational tone. Each of the seventy-five "rules" focuses on a specific action that should be taken, a trait that needs to be developed, or a prohibition to follow. The words never and always are used frequently. These are smart, no-nonsense business messages that are meant to be revisited in your rise to the top. Anyone looking to climb the corporate ladder will be grateful for Fox's direct, pithy advice - the essentials to follow if you want to reach the top.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786864379
Publisher: Hachette Books
Publication date: 10/07/1998
Edition description: 1 ED
Pages: 192
Sales rank: 382,590
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.60(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Prior to starting Fox & Co. Jeffrey J. Fox worked in senior positions for three high powered consumer and industrial marketing companies. He was Vice President , Marketing, and a Corporate Vice President of Loctite Corp, now Henkel/Loctite. He was Director of Marketing for the wine divisions of The Pillsbury Co. He was the Director of New Products for Heublein, Inc, now Diageo. (All three companies became clients of Fox & Co.) Jeffrey is the winner of Sales & Marketing Management magazine's "Outstanding Marketer Award;" winner of the American Marketing Association's "Outstanding Marketer in Connecticut;" and the National Distributors Association's award as the nation's "Best Industrial Marketer." He is the subject of a Harvard Business School case study that is rated one of the top 100 case studies, and which is thought to be the most widely taught marketing case in the world. His books have been published in 35 languages. His offices are in Chester, Connecticut.

Read an Excerpt

VI
Do Something Hard and Lonely

Regularly practice something Spartan and individualistic. Do something that you know very few other people are willing to do. This will give you a feeling of toughness, a certain self-elitism. It will mentally prepare you for the battle of business. Something that is hard and lonely is studying late at night for a graduate degree in fashion design, especially in the winter, when everyone else is asleep. Or running long, slow distances early in the morning (versus jogging at lunchtime with a mob). Split wood, write, work in the garden, read King Lear, but does it by yourself. Do something that is solitary. All great and successful athletes remember the endless hours of seemingly unrewarded toil. So do corporate presidents.


XII
Skip All Office Parties

There is no such thing as a business or "office party."' It is not a social gathering. It is business. Never party at an office party. It won't hurt you not to go at all. Don't offend people by criticizing the party or by publicly announcing your intentions. Simply don't go. Give polite excuses. Never ever go to a company picnic if you cannot bring your spouse. A company picnic without spouses is trouble. To go is to run the risk of being tarred with the bad brush of others' actions. If the unwritten rule is "you must attend or you will offend"' then go. Drink only soda. Stay no more than forty-five minutes. Thank the boss for inviting you, and leave. If anyone asks where you are going, tell that person you are meeting your spouse, or parents, or fiancée, or doctor, or music teacher, or personal trainer. Parties are supposed to be fun, enjoyed with friends. Heed the old axiom: "Don't mix business with pleasure.'''


XVIII
Arrive Forty Five Minutes Early and Leave Fifteen Minutes Late

If you are going to be first in your corporation, start practicing by being first on the job. People who arrive at work late don't like their jobs at least that's what senior management thinks. People don't arrive twelve minutes late for the movies. And being early always gives you a psychological edge over the others in your company. Don't stay at the office until ten o'clock every night. You are sending a signal that you can't keep up or that your personal life is poor. Leave fifteen minutes late instead. In those fifteen minutes organize your next day and clean your desk. You will be leaving after 95 percent of the employees any way, so your reputation as a hard worker stays intact. There are too many times in your career when circumstances such as airline schedules and sales meetings and yearend closings and such will keep you away from home until late. Give more time to your family. Plus forty-five minutes early and fifteen minutes late is an hour a day. That's two hundred fifty hours a year or 31 days. You can get ahead quickly working one extra month a year.

Table of Contents

I: Always Take the Job That Offers the Most Money
II: Avoid Staff Jobs, Seek Line Jobs
III: Don't Expect the Personnel Department to Plan Your Career
IV: Get and Keep Customers
V: Keep Physically Fit
VI: Do Something Hard and Lonely
VII: Never Write a Nasty Memo
VIII: Think for One Hour Every Day
IX: Keep and Use a Special "Idea Notebook"
X: Don't Have a Drink with the Gang
XI: Don't Smoke
XII: Skip All Office Parties
XIII: Friday is "How Ya' Doin'?" Day
XIV: Make Allies of Your Peers' Subordinates
XV: Know Everybody by Their First Name
XVI: Organize "One-Line Good-Job" Tours
XVII: Make One More Call
XVIII: Arrive Forty-five Minutes Early and Leave Fifteen Minutes Late
XIX: Don't Take Work Home from the Office
XX: Earn Your "Invitation Credentials"
XXI: Avoid Superiors When You Travel
XXII: Eat in Your Hotel Room
XXIII: Work, Don't Read Paperbacks, on the Airplane
XXIV: Keep a "People File"
XXV: Send Handwritten Notes
XXVI: Don't Get Buddy-Buddy with Your Superiors
XXVII: Don't Hide an Elephant
XXVIII: Be Visible: Practice WACADAD
XXIX: Always Take Vacations
XXX: Always Say "Yes" to a Senior Executive Request
XXXI: Never Surprise Your Boss
XXXII: Make Your Boss Look Good, and Your Boss's Boss Look Better
XXXIII: Never Let a Good Boss Make a Mistake
XXXIV: Go to the Library One Day a Month
XXXV: Add One Big New Thing to Your Life Each Year
XXXVI: Study These Books
XXXVII: "Dress for a Dance"
XXXVIII: Overinvest in People
XXXIX: Overpay Your People
XL: "Stop, Look, and Listen"
XLI: Be a Flag-Waving Company Patriot
XLII: Find and Fill the "Data Gaps"
XLIII: Homework, Homework, Homework
XLIV: Never Panic...Or Lose Your Temper
XLV: Learn to Speak and Write in Plain English
XLVI: Treat All People as Special
XLVII: Be a Credit Maker, Not a Credit Taker
XLVIII: Give Informal Surprise Bonuses
XLIX: Please, Be Polite with Everyone
L: Ten Things to Say That Make People Feel Good
LI: The Glory and the Glamour Come after the Gruntwork
LII: Tinker, Tailor, Try
LIII: Haste Makes Waste
LIV: Pour the Coals to a Good Thing
LV: Put the Importance on the Bright Idea, Not the Source of the Idea
LVI: Stay Out of Office Politics
LVII: Look Sharp and Be Sharp
LVIII: Emulate, Study, and Cherish the Great Boss
LIX: Don't Go Over Budget
LX: Never Underestimate an Opponent
LXI: Assassinate the Character Assassin with a Single Phrase
LXII: Become a Member of the "Shouldn't Have Club"
LXIII: The Concept Doesn't Have to Be Perfect, but the Execution of It Does
LXIV: Record and Collect Your Mistakes with Care and Pride
LXV: Live for Today; Plan for Tomorrow; Forget about Yesterday
LXVI: Have Fun, Laugh
LXVII: Treat Your Family as Your Number One Client
LXVIII: No Goals, No Glory
LXIX: Always Remember Your Subordinates' Spouses
LXX: See the Job through the Salespeople's Eyes
LXXI: Be a Very Tough "Heller Seller"
LXXII: Don't Be an Empire Builder
LXXIII: Push Products, Not Paper
LXXIV: To Teach Is to Learn and to Lead
LXXV: Do Not Get Discouraged by the Idea Killers
Epilogue
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