Home
Shop
Partners
Custom Solutions
About Pfeiffer
Browse Training Packages & Assessments
Browse Professional Development Books
Browse Activities, Games, & Exercises
Home > Professional Development Books > Human Resources > Games At Work: How to Recognize and Reduce Office Politics
Games At Work: How to Recognize and Reduce Office Politics
ISBN: 978-0-470-26200-9
Hardcover
256 pages
April 2009
US $24.95 Add to Cart

This price is valid for United States. Change location to view local pricing and availability.

Description
Table of Contents
Read Excerpt: Chapter (PDF)
Read Excerpt: Table of Contents (PDF)
Read Excerpt: Index (PDF)
Author Information
Reviews
Related Websites
"A terrific read not only for senior leaders and executives but also for employees seeking growth in complex organizations. Goldstein and Read dissect the interpersonal dynamics that affect a company's performance, provide a framework to understand the games that are commonly played in businesses around the world, and offer practical tools to correct these behaviors and improve the organization's effectiveness."
Jacopo Bracco, executive vice president, DIRECTV Latin America

"Whether you are an employee, manager, or CEO, this book will help you uncover the games that are going on around you and in your organization and will arm you with strategies to combat the negative effects of these games."
Corey J. Seitz, vice president, global talent management, Johnson & Johnson

"This book is a good warning sign for organizational life. A road map of potholes and wrong turns. Written in a clear and down-to-earth way, its strength is its concreteness."
Peter Block, author, Community: The Structure of Belonging

"Play or don't play, your choice. But if you need to manage and aspire to lead, you must read Goldstein and Read's helpful treatment of the games going on all around you all the time. Prepare to be entertained and disconcerted in equal measure."
Seán Meehan, Martin Hilti Professor of Marketing and Change Management, IMD

"Goldstein and Read provide an accessible and penetrating discussion of the twenty-two most common games at work and their individual and organizational causes, business costs, and remedies. Every working person who has ever been a victim or perpetrator of political games will profit from reading Games at Work."
Harvey A. Hornstein, emeritus professor of psychology; former director of Columbia University Organizational Development Programs; and organizational consultant

Evaluation Copy
Of Related Interest:
Other Titles by These Authors:

Other Human Resources Titles:
by Geary A. Rummler, Alan J. Ramias, Cherie L. Wilkins

by Richaurd Camp, Mary Vielhaber, Jack L. Simonetti

by Smith, Bucklin & Associates, Inc., Robert H. Wilbur (Editor)