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Throwing the Elephant: Zen and the Art of Managing Up
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Throwing the Elephant: Zen and the Art of Managing Up Paperback - 2004

by Bing, Stanley

  • Used
  • Acceptable
  • Paperback

What would the Buddha do if he had to deal with a rampaging elephant of a boss every day? That is the premise of Bing's wickedly funny guide to finding inner peace in the face of relentlessly obnoxious, huge, and sometimes smelly bosses.

Description

Harper Business, 2004-07-28. paperback. Acceptable. 4x0x7.
Used - Acceptable
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Details

  • Title Throwing the Elephant: Zen and the Art of Managing Up
  • Author Bing, Stanley
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Reprint
  • Condition Used - Acceptable
  • Pages 240
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Harper Business, London, England
  • Date 2004-07-28
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 0060934220-4-29439082
  • ISBN 9780060934224 / 0060934220
  • Weight 0.51 lbs (0.23 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.29 x 4.82 x 0.69 in (18.52 x 12.24 x 1.75 cm)
  • Themes
    • Religious Orientation: Buddhist
  • Dewey Decimal Code 650.13

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Summary

What Would Machiavelli Do? and Throwing the Elephant. Fortune's Stanley Bing has written two very different but complementary survival guides for today's business world. Inspired by the Florentine master, Bing offers (in Machiavelli) a way of seeing colleagues and rivals from 50,000 feet -- as teeny-tiny ants you can squish. When this method doesn't work (e.g., you have a boss), Bing counsels a Zen approach (in Elephant) that will allow you to render the elephant (i.e., your boss) weightless -- and throw and play catch with it at corporate retreats.Sit down. Breathe deep. This is the last business book you will ever need. For in these pages, acclaimed business humorist Stanley Bing solves the ultimate problem of your working life: How to manage the boss.

First line

The ways to find one's way to Enlightenment are many.

From the rear cover

Sit down. Breathe deep. This is the last business book you will ever need. For in these pages, Stanley Bing solves the ultimate problem of your working life: How to manage the boss.

The technique is simple . . . as simple as throwing an elephant. All it takes is the proper state of mind, a step-by-step plan, and a great leap of faith. This humble guide provides all these and more. It is Zen that enables one to take an object of enormous weight and size and mold it in one's grasp like a ball of Silly Putty. For senior management, in truth, is the silliest putty of them all.

This comprehensive course walks budding business bodhisattvas through basic skills needed to provide the simple elephant handling that makes everyday life possible, including but not limited to the primary task of following along after the elephant with a little broom and dustpan. Serious students will then move to intermediate steps, from Polishing the Elephant's Tusks to Hiding from the Elephant When It Has Been Drinking and Feels Quite Nasty. Beyond this level lies the land of the practiced Zen masters, culminating in the ability to leverage and then throw the now-weightless elephant--and even play catch with it at corporate retreats.

If What Would Machiavelli Would Do? was the meanest business book since the Renaissance, Throwing the Elephant provides the yang to that yin. Because sometimes you've got to be selfless, compassionate, and completely empty to get the job done.

Stanley Bing is a columnist for Fortune magazine and the author of What Would Machiavelli Do? and Lloyd: What Happened, a novel. By day, he works for a gigantic multinational conglomerate whose identity is one of the worst-kept secrets in business

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