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Leadership Model. What is leadership? Leadership is “the behaviour of an individual
when he is directing the activities of a group towards a shared goal”. ...
Leadership. Leadership and management are terms that are often used
interchangeably. It ... leadership. Leadership – how do we define it? ...
leadership. There are many definitions for leadership. According to Webster’s
dictionary leadership can be define as an act or an instance of leading. ...
Chose in Leadership Books. ... The cottage industry that's grown up around the subject
of leadership easily keeps an army of loggers working overtime. ...
Book Review Moral Leadership: Getting to the Heart of School Improvement
By: Thomas J. Sergiovanni. The heart of leadership has to ...
Submitted by ahmadhariri on January 21, 2007
Category: Business
Words: 902 | Pages: 4
Views: 284
Popularity Rank: 34,588
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1. Bill Gates:
A Visionary Leader: Traits
If we are talking creativity and ideas, Bill Gates is an American unoriginal. He is Microsoft's chief and co-founder, he is the world's richest man, and his career delivers this message: It can be wiser to follow than to lead. Let the innovators hit the beaches and take the losses; if you hold back and follow, you can clean up in peace and quiet. Gates is the Bing Crosby of American technology, granted he is an unusually hard-driving and successful businessman.
A 1968 photo shows Bill as a rapt young teenager, watching his friend Paul Allen type at a computer terminal. Allen became a co-founder of Microsoft. The child Gates has neat hair and an eager, pleasant smile; every last detail says "pat me on the head." He entered Harvard but dropped out to found Microsoft in 1975.
Microsoft's first product was a version of the programming language BASIC for the Altair 8800, arguably the world's first personal computer. BASIC, invented by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz in 1964, was someone else's idea. So was the Altair. Gates merely plugged one into the other, cream-cheesed the waiting bagel and came up with a giant hit.
The world pondered Gates and assumed he must be a great thinker. During World War II, Cargo Cults flourished on New Guinea and Melanesia: people who had never seen an airplane pondered incoming U.S. aircraft and assumed they must be divine. Technology is confusing, and these were reasonable guesses under the circumstances. In 1995 Gates published a book called "The Road Ahead." Peering far into the future, he glimpsed a technology-rich dreamworld where you will be able to "watch Gone With the Wind," he wrote, "with your own face and voice replacing Vivien Leigh's or Clark Gable's." Apparently this is just what the public had been dying to do, for "The Road Ahead" became a runaway best seller, though it is lustrous with earnest goofiness, like a greased-down...
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