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Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference
 
 

Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference [Hardcover]

Tim Sanders
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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From Publishers Weekly

The Responsibility Revolution is underway, and it's challenging the importance of the bottom line, argues Sanders (Love Is the Killer App), former CSO of Yahoo. Both consumers and employers have turned away from price consciousness to demand that companies make a difference to society through their products, manufacturing methods, environmental efforts and community outreach. According to the author, casual consumers now represent the minority; mindful consumers have brought in a new value system, paying as much attention to a company's environmental and social policies as to its pricing structures. Companies that do not clean up their acts will be left in the dust, losing customers who want their money to go toward good causes and employees who place more importance on green factors and job satisfaction than pay scale. Through success stories like Horst Rechelbacher, the brains behind the ecologically sound cosmetics company Aveda, and Lee Scott's greening of Wal-Mart in 2004, Sanders makes a compelling argument for the necessity for businesses to appeal to their customers' hearts as well as their wallets. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“This remarkably inspiring and important book will have a powerful affect on everyone who reads it. By telling the stories of everyday people at work, Tim Sanders first shows us why every one of us should make a difference, and then he shows us how to make that difference. It is a must read!” —John C. Maxwell, author of the New York Times bestseller The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership


"With intelligence and passion, Tim Sanders reveals the new competitive logic of business: Being great now depends on being good. The Responsibility Revolution is upon us -- and this remarkable book will surely accelerate its arrival. Whether you're in the boardroom or the mailroom, you owe it to yourself to read SAVING THE WORLD AT WORK and to begin putting into practice its powerful lessons."
-- Daniel H. Pink, author of A WHOLE NEW MIND and THE ADVENTURES OF JOHNNY BUNKO

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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5.0 out of 5 stars Uncle Tim Wants You!, Sep 9 2008
By 
Robert Morris (Dallas, Texas) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference (Hardcover)
Why did Tim Sanders write this book? He answers that question in the first chapter: "I want to recruit you, and train you, for the Responsibility Revolution. I want to help you feel good about your company and grow more good within it. I want to help you feel more fulfilled by your job, by helping your company to see the value of giving back to the larger world." This declaration should come as no surprise to those who have read Sanders' previous books, Love Is the Killer App: How to Win Business and Influence Friends (2002) and then The Likeability Factor: How to Boost Your L-Factor and Achieve Your Life's Dreams (2006). He really does believe that it is possible to link personal goals with business goals while adding value, do so without a great deal of funding, and thereby reduce a company's "social inefficiency." This book is best viewed as an operations manual for "infectious revolutionaries," one in which Sanders explains how to use various "business social" and assessment skills.

Sanders' use of the words "revolution" and "revolutionary" are not hyperbolic. He wants to help achieve what Clayton Christensen characterizes as "movements punctuated with disruptive innovations that either create new markets or reshape existing markets." These movements will change, radically, how companies do business. That is certainly true of Aveda, IBM, Interface, Lush, Medtronic, Patagonia, SAS Institute, Timberland, and Whole Foods. These disruptive movements occur in five phases and Sanders devotes a separate chapter to each: First, a major change of circumstances that dramatically impacts how we think about the business landscape, creating in Phase Two a new set of values prior to the arrival of the innovators in Phase Three; then, "as the new values reach a tipping point of mass popularity, the fourth, and most extreme, phase of a business revolution occurs: disruption."

In Leading the Revolution, Gary Hamel describes it this way: "First, the revolutionaries will take your markets and your customers. Next they'll take your best employees. Finally, they'll take your assets. The barbarians are no longer banging on the gates, they are eating off your best china."

During the final phase, what Sanders calls The New Order, companies develop proficiency in service to new markets, innovators become more sophisticated, and customers become more demanding. "Eventually, surviving companies will satisfy the new market needs and the competition will then turn to who does it best." The process of natural selection continues as new "infectious revolutionaries" appear, disrupting the terms of engagement in what continues to be a Responsibility Revolution.

Of special interest to me is what Sanders has to say about what he calls the "saver soldier," a highly motivated individual who leverages work as a platform to help save the world. She or he is convinced that a business can do well by doing good. Sanders examines various saver soldiers, three of whom (e.g. IBM's Jeff Immelt, Patagonia's Yvon Choinard, and Aveda's Horst Rechelbacher) "have stated that they don't expect to achieve their vision single-handedly; they need foot soldiers to scout, innovate, and execute new ideas." Sanders identifies and examines "The Six Laws of the Saver Soldier" in Chapter 8 that, together, offer an appropriate belief system for newly enlisted "troops." For example, The Law of Abundance (#3) essentially asserts that there is always enough to go around. That is, "doing good" and "doing well" are not mutually exclusive. On the contrary, Sanders insists, they are inter-dependent. It would be very difficult (if not impossible) to have one without the other. Companies that are actively engaged in the Responsibility Revolution will probably attract the "best and brightest" people and then retain them. What these companies offer will have greater appeal to customers. Most important of all, these companies will make a difference to their society, indeed to their planet, while gaining and then sustaining "an unshakable edge" over their "laggard competitors." Tim Sanders asks, "If not now, when? If not you, who?"

Meanwhile, tick tock, tick tock, tick tock....
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Uncle Tim Wants You!, Sep 16 2008
By Robert Morris - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference (Hardcover)
Why did Tim Sanders write this book? He answers that question in the first chapter: "I want to recruit you, and train you, for the Responsibility Revolution. I want to help you feel good about your company and grow more good within it. I want to help you feel more fulfilled by your job, by helping your company to see the value of giving back to the larger world." This declaration should come as no surprise to those who have read Sanders' previous books, Love Is the Killer App: How to Win Business and Influence Friends (2002) and then The Likeability Factor: How to Boost Your L-Factor and Achieve Your Life's Dreams (2006). He really does believe that it is possible to link personal goals with business goals while adding value, do so without a great deal of funding, and thereby reduce a company's "social inefficiency." This book is best viewed as an operations manual for "infectious revolutionaries," one in which Sanders explains how to use various "business social" and assessment skills.

Sanders' use of the words "revolution" and "revolutionary" are not hyperbolic. He wants to help achieve what Clayton Christensen characterizes as "movements punctuated with disruptive innovations that either create new markets or reshape existing markets." These movements will change, radically, how companies do business. That is certainly true of Aveda, IBM, Interface, Lush, Medtronic, Patagonia, SAS Institute, Timberland, and Whole Foods. These disruptive movements occur in five phases and Sanders devotes a separate chapter to each: First, a major change of circumstances that dramatically impacts how we think about the business landscape, creating in Phase Two a new set of values prior to the arrival of the innovators in Phase Three; then, "as the new values reach a tipping point of mass popularity, the fourth, and most extreme, phase of a business revolution occurs: disruption."

In Leading the Revolution, Gary Hamel describes it this way: "First, the revolutionaries will take your markets and your customers. Next they'll take your best employees. Finally, they'll take your assets. The barbarians are no longer banging on the gates, they are eating off your best china."

During the final phase, what Sanders calls The New Order, companies develop proficiency in service to new markets, innovators become more sophisticated, and customers become more demanding. "Eventually, surviving companies will satisfy the new market needs and the competition will then turn to who does it best." The process of natural selection continues as new "infectious revolutionaries" appear, disrupting the terms of engagement in what continues to be a Responsibility Revolution.

Of special interest to me is what Sanders has to say about what he calls the "saver soldier," a highly motivated individual who leverages work as a platform to help save the world. She or he is convinced that a business can do well by doing good. Sanders examines various saver soldiers, three of whom (e.g. IBM's Jeff Immelt, Patagonia's Yvon Choinard, and Aveda's Horst Rechelbacher) "have stated that they don't expect to achieve their vision single-handedly; they need foot soldiers to scout, innovate, and execute new ideas." Sanders identifies and examines "The Six Laws of the Saver Soldier" in Chapter 8 that, together, offer an appropriate belief system for newly enlisted "troops." For example, The Law of Abundance (#3) essentially asserts that there is always enough to go around. That is, "doing good" and "doing well" are not mutually exclusive. On the contrary, Sanders insists, they are inter-dependent. It would be very difficult (if not impossible) to have one without the other. Companies that are actively engaged in the Responsibility Revolution will probably attract the "best and brightest" people and then retain them. What these companies offer will have greater appeal to customers. Most important of all, these companies will make a difference to their society, indeed to their planet, while gaining and then sustaining "an unshakable edge" over their "laggard competitors." Tim Sanders asks, "If not now, when? If not you, who?"

Meanwhile, tick tock, tick tock, tick tock....

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Power of One, Sep 25 2008
By Dan Miller "Creative Thinker" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference (Hardcover)
So many of the "social responsibility" and "go green" books make it hard to see how the average guy on the street could possibly make a difference. In "Saving the World at Work" Tim brings it on home. One person can make a difference.

The last chapter of "Saving the World at Work" is "If Not You, Then Who? -- It took my breath away and is a stark wake-up call to our personal responsibility. There is too much emotional impact in that story to try to quickly tell it here - and I want everyone to anticipate it as they finish reading the book. I was reduced to tears as I read it - and immediately had 4 or 5 people in my own life come to mind. I just want to thank Tim for that powerful example of how one person really can make a difference.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring call to action, Sep 22 2008
By Mark Thompson "Mark Thompson" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saving the World at Work: What Companies and Individuals Can Do to Go Beyond Making a Profit to Making a Difference (Hardcover)
If you ever thought you'd need to wait for the weekend to make a difference, think again. Tim brilliantly connects the dots between saving the planet and saving the office 24/7. This message could not possibly come at a better time! Most people are starving for more meaning at work and what better way to do that than know you can change the world at the same time!
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 26 reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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