R Charan’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Conquering a Culture of Indecision
  • Article

May 2001

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1,283 Reads

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59 Citations

Harvard Business Review

R Charan

The single greatest cause of corporate underperformance is the failure to execute. Author Ram Charan, drawing on a quarter century of observing organizational behavior, perceives that such failures of execution share a family resemblance: a misfire in the personal interactions that are supposed to produce results. Faulty interactions rarely occur in isolation, Charan says. Far more often, they're typical of the way large and small decisions are made or not made throughout the organization. The inability to take decisive action is rooted in a company's culture. But, Charan notes, leaders create a culture of indecisiveness, and leaders can break it. Breaking it requires them to take three actions. First, they must engender intellectual honesty in the connections between people. Second, they must see to it that the organization's "social operating mechanisms"--the meetings, reviews, and other situations through which people in the corporation do business--have honest dialogue at their cores. And third, leaders must ensure that feedback and follow-through are used to reward high achievers, coach those who are struggling, and discourage those whose behaviors are blocking the organization's progress. By taking these three approaches and using every encounter as an opportunity to model open and honest dialogue, a leader can set the tone for an organization, moving it from paralysis to action.

Citations (1)


... A long evaluation with many tests, tools, detailed past histories, and meandering storylines does not always equate to a quality assessment. Furthermore, it may be that more senior evaluators, presumably with skills honed over years of work, should be expected to spend less time than their junior counterparts to reach the same outcomes, and thus more "extensive" evaluations may reflect issues of focus or "analysis paralysis" (Charan, 2001) rather than quality. This appears to be a critical area of study as the field moves past basic survey research (Robb, 2013) and into more comprehensive understanding of approaches best assist families in litigation. ...

Reference:

Models and methods of cost‐effective child custody evaluation
Conquering a Culture of Indecision
  • Citing Article
  • May 2001

Harvard Business Review