The Five Most Important Questions You Will Ever Ask about Your Organization: An Inspiring Tool for Organizations and the People Who Lead Them by Peter F. Drucker


The Five Most Important Questions You Will Ever Ask about Your Organization: An Inspiring Tool for Organizations and the People Who Lead Them
Title : The Five Most Important Questions You Will Ever Ask about Your Organization: An Inspiring Tool for Organizations and the People Who Lead Them
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0470227567
ISBN-10 : 9780470227565
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 144
Publication : First published September 24, 1993

With Peter Drucker's five essential questions and the help of five of today's thought leaders, this little book will challenge readers to take a close look at the very heart of their organizations and what drives them. A tool for self-assessment and transformation, answering these five questions will fundamentally change the way you work, helping you lead your organization to an exceptional level of performance. Peter Drucker's five questions are:

What is our Mission? with Jim Collins
Who is our Customer? with Phil Kotler
What does the Customer Value? with Jim Kouzes
What are our Results? with Judith Rodin
What is our Plan? with V. Kasturi Rangan
These essential questions, grounded in Peter Drucker's theories of management, will take readers on a exploration of organizational and personal self-discovery, giving them a means to assess how to be--how to develop quality, character, mind-set, values and courage. The questions lead to action. By asking these questions, readers can focus on why they are doing what they are doing in their work, and how to do it better. Designed for today's busy professionals, this brief, clear and accessible book will challenge readers to ask these provocative questions and it will stimulate spirited discussions and action within any organization, inspiring positive change and new levels of excellence, helping all to envision the future of theirs' or any organization.


The Five Most Important Questions You Will Ever Ask about Your Organization: An Inspiring Tool for Organizations and the People Who Lead Them Reviews


  • Matthew

    The five most important questions are as follows...

    1. What is our mission?
    2. Who is our customer?
    3. What does the customer value?
    4. What are our results?
    5. What is our plan?

    Here are some of my favorite thoughts from it...

    "You cannot arrive at the right definition of results with our significant input from your customers - and please do not get into a debate over that term. The danger is in acting on what you believe satisfies the customer. You will inevitably make wrong assumptions. Leadership should not even try to guess at the answers, it should always go to customers a systematic quest for those answers."

    "Planning is not an event. It is the continuous process of strengthening what works and abandoning what does not, of making risk-taking decisions with the greatest knowledge of their potential effect, of setting objectives, appraising performance and results through systematic feedback, and making ongoing adjustments as conditions change."

    "If you have quick consensus on an important matter, don’t make the decision. Acclimation means nobody has done the homework. The organizations decisions are important and risky, and they should be controversial. Nonprofit institutions need a healthy atmosphere for dissent if they wish to foster innovation and commitment. nonprofits must encourage honest and constructive disagreement precisely because everybody is committed to a good cause."

    "Open discussion uncovers what the objections are."

    "Your commitment to self-assessment is a commitment to developing yourself and your organization as a leader. You have vital judgments ahead: whether to change the mission, whether to abandon programs that have outlived their usefulness and concentrate resources elsewhere, how to match opportunities with your competence and commitment, how you will build community and change lives. Self-assessment is the first action requirement of leadership: the constant reshaping, constant refocusing, never being satisfied."

    Question 1: What is our Mission?

    "Changing lives is always the starting point and ending point. A mission cannot be impersonal; it has to have deep meaning, be something you believe in- something you know is right. A fundamental responsibility of leadership is to make sure that everybody knows the mission, understand it, lives it."

    "The effective mission statement is short and sharply focused."

    "Every board member, volunteer, and staff person should be able to see the mission and say, 'Yes. This is something I want to be remembered for.'”

    "If a great opportunity does not fit your mission, then the answer must be 'Thank you, but no.'"

    "No matter how much the world changes, people still have a fundamental need to belong to something they can feel proud of."

    Question 2: Who Is Our Customer? ~Peter Drucker

    “'Who must be satisfied for the organization to achieve results?' When you answer the question, you define your customer as one who values your service, who wants what you offer, who feels it’s important to them."

    "The primary customer is the person whose life is changed through your work." S

    "Customers are never static. Their needs, wants, and aspirations will evolve. There may be entirely new customers you must satisfy to achieve results - individuals who really need the service, want the service, but not in the way in which it is available today. And there are customers you should stop serving because the organization has filled a need, because people can be better served elsewhere, or because you are not producing results."

    "Often, the customer is one step ahead of you. So you must know your customer - or quickly get to know them."

    "Nobody can guarantee your job. Only customers can guarantee your job. The best companies don’t create customers. They create fans. Our business is not to casually please everyone, but to deeply please our target customers."

    "An old Chinese proverb says, 'If you cannot smile, do not open a shop.'"

    Question 3: What Does The Customer Value?

    "Many organizations are very clear about the value they would like to deliver, but they often don’t understand the value from the perspective of their customers."

    Customers value an organization that seeks their feedback and that is capable of solving their problems and meeting their needs. Customers value a leader and a team who have the ability to listen and the courage to challenge the 'business-as-usual' environment, all in service of the yearnings of the customer."

    Question 4: What Are Our Results?

    "Each organization must identify its customers, learn what they value, develop meaningful measures, ad honestly judge whether, in fact, lives are being changed."

    "To abandon anything is always bitterly resisted. People in any organization are always attached to the obsolete-the things that should have worked but did not, the things that once were productive and not longer are. Abandoning anything is thus difficult, but only for a fairly short spell. Rebirth can begin once the dead are buried: six months later, everybody wonders, 'Why did it take us so long?'"

    Question 5: What Is Our Plan?

    "The mission transcends today but guides today, informs today. It provides the framework for setting goals and mobilizing the resources of the organization for getting the right things done."

    "To further the mission, there must be action today and specific aims for tomorrow."

    "Goals are overarching and should be few in number. If you have more than five goals, you have none. Goals flow from mission, aim the organization where it must go, build on strength, address opportunity, and taken together, outline your desired future."

    "Appraisal will be ongoing. The organization must monitor progress in achieving goals and meeting objectives, and above all, must measure results in changed lives. True self-assessment is never finished. Leadership requires constant resharpening, refocusing, never really being satisfied."

    "Planning is the process of translating the organization’s strategic or mission goals to a set of actionable programs, and tracing the path of how those within the organization would meet the goals. A plan, is the action agenda that is aimed at reaching the goal."

  • Carol Sente

    This is a wonderful concise and focused book guiding leaders of organizations on the five most important questions to ask of themselves and their organizations -

    1. What is our mission?
    2. Who is our customer?
    3. What does the customer value?
    4. What are our results?
    5. What is our plan?

    It is written by the Leader to Leader Institute which was originally founded by management guru Peter Drucker. The current CEO is the most impressive Frances Hesselbein (amazing record of accomplishment with the Girl Scouts of America), and has contributions from names renown in leadership and business circles like Jim Collins, Philip Kotler and Jim Kouzes plus two I didn’t know Judith Rodin and V. Katsuri Rangan.

    The book is perfect for a quick refresher, for start-ups, for organizations who have lost their way due to changing environments, for leadership teams to discuss and for those new to leading organizations. There is no excuse not to read this 96 page book.

    I gave this book 4 rather than 5 stars only because it is so short and for those individuals who have been students of management and leadership for decades, it leaves the senses just a bit underwhelmed. Maybe because I have read several of these contributors’ full books and they provide so much more depth. Definitely an important read, particularly for the reasons listed above.

  • Moshe Mikanovsky

    Even if you know this already, not a bad reminder.

  • Ashraf Bashir

    Can be summarized in a blog post, not worth a full book! Just focus on your customer and start with a customer-first mentality, this is the core message.

  • David Pulliam

    Great read and foundation for discussion and reflection if you’re in a non-profit. I would still read his other works as well because this book, since the scope is narrow, misses some really helpful concepts like decision-making and people decisions, budgets, what is management.

  • Ryan Rodriquez

    This is a great little tool for any leader to take a step back and self-evaluate their organization and it's priorities. It's a REALLY quick read and a tool that leaders will have on their bookshelves to reference from time to time.

  • Pavel Annenkov

    О ЧЕМ КНИГА:
    Друкер дает нам фреймворк из пяти самых главных вопросов, которые должна задать себе любая фирма. Эти вопросы очень простые. Но чтобы найти на них ответы надо проделать большую работу. Друкер, как всегда, видит самую суть проблемы и помогает нам её решить.

    ГЛАВНАЯ МЫСЛЬ КНИГИ:
    Компания - это постоянно меняющийся механизм. Выдающиеся компании живут в будущем. Они предвидят изменения рынков и предпочтений клиентов.

    ЗАЧЕМ ЧИТАТЬ ЭТУ КНИГУ?
    Чтобы напомнить себе о ценности пяти главных вопросов для вашей компании.

    МЫСЛИ И ВЫВОДЫ ИЗ КНИГИ:
    - Планирование - это не событие, а процесс, который ставит задачи для компании сегодня.

    - У лидера бизнеса нет другого выбора, как предвидеть будущее и планировать, как его формировать внутри компании.

    - Миссия компании показывает, что вы делаете, а самое главное, что не делаете.

    - Три главных вопроса для формулировки миссии:
    1. Какова наша цель?
    2. Почему мы делаем то, что делаем?
    3. В конечном итоге, чем мы хотим запомниться?
    Третий вопрос очень важный, так как он показывает, какой должна стать наша компания.

    - Лучшие компании создают не клиентов, а фанатов.

    FIVE ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE PLANS
    - Abandonment: The first decision is whether to abandon what does not work, what has never worked—the things that have outlived their usefulness and their capacity to con tribute. Ask of any program, system, or customer group, "If we were not committed to this today, would we go into it?" If the answer is no, say "How can we get out—fast?"
    - Concentration: Concentration is building on success, strengthening what does work. The best rule is to put your efforts into your successes. You will get maximum results. When you have strong performance is the very time to ask, "Can we set an even higher standard?" Concentration is vital, but it's also very risky. You must choose the right concentrations, or—to use a military term—you leave your flanks totally uncovered.
    - Innovation: You must also look for tomorrow's success, the true innovations, the diversity that stirs the imagina tion. What are the opportunities, the new conditions, the emerging issues? Do they fit you? Do you really believe in this? But you have to be careful. Before you go into something new, don't say, "This is how we do it." Say, "Let's find out what this requires. What does the cus tomer value? What is the state of the art? How can we make a difference?" Finding answers to these questions is essential.
    - Risk taking: Planning always involves decisions on where to take the risks. Some risks you can afford to take—if something goes wrong, it is easily reversible with minor damage. And some decisions may carry great risk, but you cannot afford not to take it. You have to balance the short range with the long. If you are too conservative, you miss the opportunity. If you commit too much too fast, there may not be a long run to worry about. There is no formula for these risk-taking decisions. They are entrepreneurial and uncertain, but they must be made.
    - Analysis: Finally, in planning it is important to recognize when you do not know, when you are not yet sure whether to abandon, concentrate, go into something new, or take a particular risk. Then your objective is to conduct an analysis. Before making the final decision, you study a weak but essential performance area, a challenge on the horizon, the opportunity just beginning to take shape.

    - I encourage you especially to keep asking the question, What do we want to be remembered for? It is a question that induces you to renew yourself—and the organization— because it pushes you to see what you can become.

    ЧТО Я БУДУ ПРИМЕНЯТЬ:
    Понравился тезис о том, что планирование - это всегда оценка и принятие на себя рисков. Слишком консервативные компании, которые не рискуют, могут потерять хорошие возможности для роста и разв��тия. Нет точной формулы для оценки рисков, но решения принимать надо.

    ЕЩЕ НА ЭТУ ТЕМУ:
    Алан Лафли "Игра на победу. Как стратегия работает на самом деле"

  • Mark Jones

    This is an excellent resource for pastors and church leaders. You can use it with your church board, deacon board, elder team, or vestry. However, it is not linked in any way with the Bible, so you will need to supply Scripture where you think it best fits.

    For instance, I took my team through the five Great Commissions given in the four gospels and in Acts 1:8. Then we worked on the mission portion of the workbook.

    My only pick, and I'm dropping a star for it, is sometimes I do not like the layout of the worksheets. Drucker's people have published other versions of this tool for the business community. In those the worksheet layout is superior. But when I work with teams, I purchase this one because it's 1/2 the cost and still works well.

    This is an excellent tool. Every pastor should take their team through this material. Add in the Scripture and make certain your team feels free to be honest. If possible, bring in a facilitator to do the job and you, pastor, just participate.

  • Leah Sciabarrasi

    This quick read is one of Peter Drucker's most referenced frameworks. Like some of my accreditation discussions last week, this book is all about company self-assessment. It's a method for assessing what you are doing, why you are doing it, and what you must do to improve an organization's performance. The five essential questions include:
    1. What is our mission?
    2. Who is our customer?
    3. What does our customer value?
    4. What are our results?
    5. What is our plan?
    This framework forces organizations to focus on their mission and narrow their activities to meet their mission and what the customer ACTUALLY needs. This might include identifying what NOT to do, as well.

    Things to remember: "Planning is not an event. It is a continuous process of strengthening what works and abandoning what does not, of making risk-taking decisions with the greatest knowledge of their potential effect, of setting objectives, appraising performance and results through systematic feedback, and making ongoing adjustments as conditions change." (p. 4)

  • Margaret Klein

    This was a short, quick book that I read as part of an assessment of a non-profit board I serve. I didn't think I would like it. Too business focused for the non-profit world--especially synagogues and other Jewish institutions. BUT I think it was exactly the right book. 5 questions:
    What is our mission?
    Who is our customer?
    What do our customers' value?
    How do we measure results?
    What is our plan?
    These are questions we all need to ask--especially in these turbulent times. Flexibility, creativity, being nimble, all important but need to go back to what do your customers, members, associates want, need and value.
    While this is a short book (120 pages), it will have a lifetime of impact.

  • Niels Philbert

    I will recommend reading some Drucker. It's a must, if you are working in a an organisation in modern society. Just skip this one.

    The book is part Druckers words and part reflections from five "thought leaders". The Drucker part is good. The thought leader part is too decoupled from the main text.

    I was curious to see if this short book would be a good introduction to Druckers work to recommend to new readers. It is not.

    Read "The Effective Executive" and/or "Managing Oneself" instead.

  • M

    Very good book about organizational self assessment to ensure its success. The idea is to ask the following 5 questions:
    - what's our mission?
    - Who's out customer?
    - What does our customer value?
    - What are our results?
    - What's our plan? (has 5 elements: abandon, concentration, innovation, risk taking, analysis)

  • Vishalkumar

    An interesting book. Authors talk about 5 basic questions every employee/associate of an organization must ask or brainstorm while working.

    Though the questions look simple; however the context and answer of the questions might be complex. Exploring these questions will help to identify future direction, strategy and operations modification.

  • Groot

    This is kind of a bait and switch. Drucker is listed as the author, but he died. They quote him often, but it written by others. Definitely not Drucker.

    Mercifully short, it seems obsessed with non-profits, but is remarkably disappointed with them, their holier-than-thou attitude, their disdain for their beneficiaries, and lack of concern for actually improving their lives.

    I don't recommend.

  • kanchan

    This isn't written by Drucker. Rather it is 5 other leaders taking Drucker's 5 questions and applying them to different sectors/fields. There is a strong focus on non-profits and health care. Information and delivery is very dense with minima fluff, providing a good overview of many key leadership and organizational concepts.

  • Dave

    What amazes me about Drucker is his foresight of business progression dating back to the 1940's. Everything he's written can be applied to modern day business strategy. The five questions will challenge everyone to look at their organizations through a different lens.

  • Stephen

    READ MAY 2017

    While this is geared to non-profit organizations, the five questions apply to any organization.

  • Kelly Ann Meegan

    Book was a quick read. Made some good points and I enjoyed it

  • Eldon Phukuile

    Very good questions to help define your vision, purpose and strategy

  • Meg

    Quick read on great questions to ask to focus and drive an organization.

  • Itai Chitungo

    Here Drucker emphasis on the importance of understanding how the organization works so as to improve its performance

  • Richard

    Blinkist summary

  • Luis Pavon

    What is our mission?
    Who is our customer?
    What does our customer value?
    What are our results?
    What is our plan?

  • Emily

    More nonprofit focused than expected. It’s great stuff, but nothing new or particularly earth shattering.

  • Emerson John Tiu Ng

    A nice book for every organization