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The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works di Ricardo Semler
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The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works

di Ricardo Semler

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Ricardo Semler has a very good grasp on human nature. He uses this to allow people to keep themselves motivated by aligning their personal interests with that of the companies. He thinks outside the box and goes against conventional wisdom, but as he might say, why is conventional wisdom wise at all? I read this at a time when I was going through a lot of boredom with life and work. It was very inspirational and thought provoking. ( )
  SmokeJumper | Apr 6, 2009 |
This is a business book written by the CEO of a successful, mid-size Brazilian company. The book uses stories from the company (Semco) business history to drive home specific insights and points. The thrust of the book is to praise and explain the underlying principles behind Semco's success, which seems one part business ethics and focus, and one part extreme delegation and decentralization geographically, role-wise, and business division-wise. The book starts out extolling and explaining that since business devices like email and Blackberries, and the sense of urgency of modern business, eat into and corrupt our sacred weekend personal time anyway, then why not give snippets of personal time throughout the week so that working weekends is part of the normal culture. The book then meanders to applying this whole culture of 'laid back', sort of work whenever you want, be self-driven into how those constructs extend into ways of making business decisions.

The book seems didactic and explanatory and lecturing more than it does accessible and self-critical. So the tone itself seems more self-congratulatory than passionate. This is a bit of a turn-off. It also doesn't really address cultural differences in South America and Brazil vs. America where I suspect a large % of the books readers will hail from. While a couple of US companies, such as Best Buy, have let their employees adopt a self-driven schedule, most companies aren't going to let their workers have time off during business hours of the week, even if those employees work hours on the weekend. As such, a lot of the book could even be described as a philosophical nudging to small and mid-size business CEO's or entrepreneurs to 'relinquish control' or a control paradigm and "Lighten Up. Breathe. Let intuition, mistakes, and serendipity happen". Clearly this style is so anathema to many US corporations that the book becomes an fantastical journey into what it might be like to work in Brazil rather than how to run a US business, for most readers. The sections on ethics are the most enlightened and valuable. I would not recommend this unless you are a manager, vice-president, CEO or entrepreneur with cultural and work-hour control of employees dealing with the issues of central control, accountability, and how to optimize hard workers and getting them time at home. ( )
  shawnd | Sep 3, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0099425238, Paperback)

Email and paperwork have invaded homes. Most people know how to work on Sunday evening. But no one yet knows how to go to the cinema on Monday afternoon. A new way to work is needed. Since "Maverick!" was published, the growth and success of Semco have been explosive: it's now five times bigger than it was four years ago. It has embraced the internet world, expanded in services, and employs 2,300 people, compared to 350 when "Maverick!" was written. A new way of working has emerged at Semco of which the tell-tale signs are: hammocks where people rest during the day, Retire-a-Little Plans, the end of the head office, the abolition of control and boarding school mentality. The results: inordinate success for 20 years, practically non-existent staff turnover, and an organization that covers an enormous range of business activity, from machinery to environmental consulting, and from real estate advisory services to new business start-ups, smoothly and coherently. It's time for a new way to work to be created, and Semco is leading the way. "The Seven Day Weekend" tells the fascinating and unlikely story of how this can be achieved.

(ricavata da Amazon Fri, 08 Jan 2010 23:46:07 -0500)

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