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Peter Senge [1947-0] American
Rank: 102
Scientist, Lecturer


Peter Michael Senge is an American systems scientist who is a senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management, co-faculty at the New England Complex Systems Institute, and the founder of the Society for Organizational Learning. 

Failure, Leadership, Best, Environmental



QuoteTagsRank
Most leadership strategies are doomed to failure from the outset. As people have been noting for years, the majority of strategic initiatives that are driven from the top are marginally effective - at best. Best, Failure, Leadership
101
I'm really interested in how you create a whole new economy of recycling. It's literally the 'underground economy.' All this stuff that on the surface creates growth and profit, ends up with waste, junk, and CO2. So how do you make it economic to bring new players into the ball game?
102
Innovation requires resources to invest, and you can see many companies pulling back and going into an intense protective mode in a major extended period of financial distress.
103
If you are realistic about how our present society works, the economic clout - and a lot of the political clout, frankly - is in the business sector. And it's the locus of innovation.
104
There's a lot of American kids think their food comes from the grocery store and the concept of seasonality has no meaning to them whatsoever.
105
Business has a way of talking about how to create value, which is in some way isn't bad... We just need to start thinking about if the value we want to create is consistent with all social and environmental well being. Environmental
106
How do you know what people value? Well, you watch what they buy. How do we know what products to create? Well, it's based on what they value.
107
A well-managed business will have a high return on invested capital. But that's a consequence. It's not a way to manage a business.
108
One industrial age belief is that GDP or GNP is a measure of progress. I don't care if you're the President of China or the U.S., if your country doesn't grow, you're in trouble. But we all know that beyond a certain level of material need, further material acquisition doesn't make people happier.
109
The company-as-a-machine model fits how people think about and operate conventional companies. And, of course, it fits how people think about changing conventional companies: You have a broken company, and you need to change it, to fix it.
110
In the Machine Age, the company itself became a machine - a machine for making money.
111
The Industrial Age is not sustainable. It's not sustainable in ecological terms, and it's not sustainable in human terms.
112
Governments, especially democratic ones, are short-term and nationalistic.
113
The further human society drifts away from nature, the less we understand interdependence.
114
Most leadership strategies are doomed to failure from the outset. Failure, Leadership
115
The most universal challenge that we face is the transition from seeing our human institutions as machines to seeing them as embodiments of nature.
116
In our ordinary experiences with other people, we know that approaching each other in a machinelike way gets us into trouble.
117
Nobody likes to throw stuff away. It's just antithetical to our sense of being a person. But we're all habituated to that way of living today.
118
You go to any MBA program, and you will be taught the theory of the firm, that the purpose of the firm is the maximization of return on invested capital. I always thought this was a kind of lunacy.
119

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