MBA course: Organizational Behavior and Leadership
Setup/question: If one's superior acted in such a way that s/he totally lost the respect of her/his subordinate(s), would it be in the best interest of the subordinate(s), or even arguably also in the best interest of the organization, for the subordinate(s) to revolt and seek the removal of the superior?
The "guru"'s answer: No, never.
Follow-up question: Could you please elaborate?
"Guru": No need. It is a cardinal sin to revolt against one's superior. Put in another way, it equates to career suicide, period.
Conclusion of discussion: A functional organization has proper established mechanisms to select/remove its leadership, and revolt/rebellion is not one of them.
An MBA friend actaully asked the very same question in class
所有跟帖:
•
You exposed yourself (no pun intended) ...
-diaozhi-
♀
(208 bytes)
()
07/10/2010 postreply
20:04:48
•
我是你的fan,我們可以組成一個fan串子。
-吃糖?-
♂
(14 bytes)
()
07/10/2010 postreply
20:56:15
•
我是你的fan,你也串了他倆吧。
-:-}-
♀
(0 bytes)
()
07/10/2010 postreply
21:19:50
•
wish you guys all got on a string and I could B.B.Q.
-青裙-
♂
(0 bytes)
()
07/10/2010 postreply
23:53:40
•
吊之,haha
-青裙-
♂
(0 bytes)
()
07/11/2010 postreply
07:27:09
•
欠揍! haha, good name.
-青裙-
♂
(0 bytes)
()
07/11/2010 postreply
00:03:25
•
unless
-Cathy_Bay-
♀
(99 bytes)
()
07/11/2010 postreply
04:55:59