The No Asshole Rule: Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn't by Robert I. Sutton, Author (Read by)

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(Compact Disc - Abridged)

  • Pub. Date: February 2007
  • Sales Rank: 295,354

    Reader Rating: (23 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2007
    • Publisher: Hachette Audio
    • Format: Compact Disc
    • Sales Rank: 295,354

    Synopsis

    The No Asshole Rule is a New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today and Business Week bestseller. It won a Quill Award for the top business book of 2007, and was recently chosen as one of audible.com's top picks as well.

    Publishers Weekly

    This meticulously researched book, which grew from a much buzzed-about article in the Harvard Business Review, puts into plain language an undeniable fact: the modern workplace is beset with assholes. Sutton (Weird Ideas that Work), a professor of management science at Stanford University, argues that assholes-those who deliberately make co-workers feel bad about themselves and who focus their aggression on the less powerful-poison the work environment, decrease productivity, induce qualified employees to quit and therefore are detrimental to businesses, regardless of their individual effectiveness. He also makes the solution plain: they have to go. Direct and punchy, Sutton uses accessible language and a bevy of examples to make his case, providing tests to determine if you are an asshole (and if so, advice for how to self-correct), a how-to guide to surviving environments where assholes freely roam and a carefully calibrated measure, the "Total Cost of Assholes," by which corporations can assess the damage. Although occasionally campy and glib, Sutton's work is sure to generate discussions at watercoolers around the country and deserves influence in corporate hiring and firing strategies. (Feb.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    ROBERT SUTTON is a Professor of Management Science and Engineering at Stanford University.

    Customer Reviews

    Management 101by Anonymous

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    December 05, 2009: This CD was a great deal from B&N (cheap!) and the content was better than expected. The author, a professor from Stanford, somehow knows a lot more about the workplace than most corporate people I've worked for over the years. He even practices what he preaches...his work group refuses to ruin their civil climate by keeping creeps, bullies, and a**holes OUT of the mix. Oh, how I wish I had the luxury!

    There's a true story Sutton tells about a community that accidentally loses their a**holes (I won't ruin it for you) that had me in stitches. I've relayed the story to friends and they've cracked up, too.

    This book should be a required course for management. I've been tempted to leave the CD in my VP's mailbox! Our company could get so much more done if we could get rid of the bullies who stonewall projects, back-stab, and generally make our jobs tougher just because their methods worked on the playground in elementary school.

    Strategic take on dealing with weaselsby RolfDobelli

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    July 14, 2009: Robert I. Sutton, Ph.D., professor of organizational behavior, teaches management science at Stanford University. He is a learned, respected academic. Is it odd that such an erudite, sophisticated individual would write a book with profanity in its title? Not according to Sutton. Yes, mean-spirited, nasty people are weasels and dirty rats. But the word that ideally summarizes such a person, Sutton says, is in his title, so that's what he uses. He first employed it in a much-quoted piece in the Harvard Business Review. He expanded that article into this book, which explains why the business world seems to be knee deep in ratfinks, how to avoid them and how to deal with them when you must. getAbstract suggests that if you work in an office or hospital or bank or submarine or massage parlor, or on a cement crew, loading dock, oilrig or spaceship to Mars, you probably must deal with your share of - let's call them weasels. Sutton's book teaches you how to do so most effectively and not get too banged up in the process.


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