My Own Book Review


Unplugged - My Own Book Review 

Henry MINTZBERG, The Nature of Managerial Work 
(1973) & Simply Managing: What Manager Do - And Can 
Do Better (2013). 

reviewed by himself 

The “unplugged” section seeks to experience new forms of book reviews. We 
regularly grant a wild card to  a world-class scholar to  review his/her own Classic. 
In “My own book review”, authors will tell us the story of "what I was trying to do" 
with sometimes some auto-ethnographic considerations. By recounting the  building 
process of one seminal research with a contemporary lens, they may give some 
insights for the current craft of research and also share with us renunciations, 
doubts and joys in their intimate writing experience.

! Reviewing  one’s own book is an interesting idea; finally a chance for some 
objectivity in a book review!
! I will review my first book The Nature of Managerial Work, (1973), together 
with my next-to-last one, Simply Managing (2013), because they address the 
same topic, 40 years apart. (In fact, Simply Managing is an abbreviated version 
of Managing, published  in 2009, with some of the  more formal material taken 
out.) 
! The samples are different. The former was based  on one week of 
observation of 5 chief executives, three of them in businesses, while the latter 
was based  on a day of observation of 29 managers at all levels, more distributed 
across private, public, and plural sector organizations.
! The structure of the two  books may appear to be similar, with a number of 
chapters paralleling each other, although some are in fact quite different. I shall 
review these similarities and differences, chapter by chapter, before asking in 
conclusion what I learned in these ensuing 40 years.

OPENINGS 

! The openings are rather different. In Managerial Work, I summarized the 
book in the first chapter and presented a review of earlier literature on the nature 
of managerial work in Chapter 2—in terms of various schools of thought—as 
would  be  expected in a book that derived from my doctoral thesis. Simply 
Managing is meant to be  a more popular book for managers, so there is less 
literature review and a more provocative introduction: to various myths of 
managing (for example, the distinction between leaders and managers). On the 
other hand, the whole of Managerial Work debunked a number of myths of 
managing, so perhaps the two books are on the same page, so to speak. 

M@n@gement
2015, vol. 18(2): 186-188

186

Paperback: 298 pages
Publisher: Harper & Row (1973)
Language: English
ISBN: 978-0060445560

Paperback: 216 pages
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler (2013)
Language: English
ISBN: 978-1609949234



CHARACTERISTICS OF MANAGING

! I was happy to  keep  the next chapter of Simply Managing much like that of 
Managerial Work. It was the best received chapter, and since I claim in one  of the 
myths of Chapter 1 in Simply Managing that managerial work is a fundamental 
practice that does not change, why change this chapter? It points out the pace 
and pressures of managing, which perhaps resonated with readers tired of this 
job  so often having been described as akin to orchestra conducting (in 
performance anyway, not rehearsal!).
! Yet maybe I too got a little  caught up  in this. Of the 29 days of observation 
discussed in Simply Managing, some certainly demonstrated these 
characteristics (e.g., the  entrepreneurial head of a chain of retail stores and the 
head nurse of a surgical ward in a hospital), but others were somewhat more 
calm. Other characteristics described in both books do, however, seem to apply 
more generally, such as the oral nature of managing and the wide range of 
contacts that managers have, both inside and outside the unit they manage. 

CONTENT OF MANAGING 

! The next chapter of both books considered the  context of managing, what I 
called  its “working roles” in Managerial Work and “a model of managing”  in 
Simply Managing. 
! The ten roles I described in Managerial Work (figurehead, leader, liaison, 
monitor, disseminator, spokesman, entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource 
allocator, negotiator) received a good  deal of attention: finally something in print 
beyond the tired words of “planning, organizing, coordinating, commanding, and 
controlling”  (all words for controlling) that had dominated the literature for half a 
century.
! But I was not especially happy with this by the time  I came to the revision. I 
didn’t feel that this description was wrong so much as inadequate—constituting a 
list instead of a model. So the chapters of Managerial Work and Simply Managing 
differ markedly. I like  the model in Simply Managing, shown as managing  on 
three planes—information, people, and action—into the organization and out to 
its surroundings. On this model, I laid  various roles, similar to those of the  earlier 
book but conceptually tighter. I think this captures the spirit of the practice  of 
managing well, but I’m not sure that anyone has taken much notice, at least 
compared with the earlier ten roles. I hope this changes.

VARIETIES OF MANAGING

! Both books have chapters on varieties of managing. That of Managerial 
Work was much more systematic, presenting hypothesis on the  effects of, for 
example, the nature of the industry, the level of the job, and  the size of the 
organization.
! But what were managers to do with that? So in Simply Managing, I 
dropped the hypotheses. I studied the 29 days carefully and came up  with a 
conclusion that surprised myself: that some of the factors we assume to be most 
significant—such as national culture  (for example, managing in China versus the 
U.S.)—may not be all that significant, while others—such as the form of the 
organization (professional versus machine, etc.)—may be more  so than 
previously thought. Myths remain in understanding managerial work.

M@n@gement, 17(2): 186-188! My Own Book Review

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SCIENCE, CONUNDRUMS, AND EFFECTIVENESS

! From here the two books diverge. Managerial Work went into an aberration 
about science in managerial work: programing it for greater effectiveness. I rarely 
repudiate what I have  written, and I am not sorry I included this. It did indicate my 
inclination back then. (I had  worked in Operational Research at the Canadian 
National Railways before I did my graduate studies at MIT.) But I soon realized 
that this was a bit of a dead end.
! What I did instead in Simply Managing particularly pleases me. Before 
concluding with a chapter on managing effectively, I added a chapter on the 
conundrums of managing (some threads of which can be found in Managerial 
Work). As an objective reviewer, I find this chapter terrific, and hope it will get 
much more attention. Imagine asking  “How can a manager keep  informed when 
the very nature of the job  removed him or her from the very thing being 
managed?” Or “How to maintain the necessary confidence without slipping into 
arrogance?”  I think these  conundrums get closest to describing the intricate 
complexities of managing: I use them when I do workshops with managers.
The last chapter of Simply Managing, called “Managing  Effectively”, is playful, but 
I am happy with it because I believe it addresses the right issues with serious 
intent: the inevitably flawed manager; selecting the devils you know; the 
difficulties of assessing managerial effectiveness; and  how to develop  managers 
by recognizing that, while no manager can be created in a classroom, people with 
experience in the practice, can there be given the opportunity to learn by 
reflecting together on their own experience.

40 YEARS LATER

! I am quite happy with Simply Managing, happier than with Managerial 
Work, even though the latter has done so well. Simply Managing  has yet to 
succeed like that, but I feel that it deserves to. The job  of managing is important, 
and the more we all understood it, the better it will be practiced. We are still 
inundated with myths about managing, such as the nonsense that “If you can’t 
measure it, you can’t manage it.”  Whoever measured with any sophistication the 
culture of an organization, the potential market for a truly new product, or 
managing itself. Indeed, has anyone ever even tried to measure the performance 
of measurement? 
! What have I learned  in the ensuring  years? To be more playful for sure—to 
ease up  and  let go. Readers learn more, and so does the author. I also learned to 
see  managing more comprehensively. With that one exception (of programming 
the job), I think I was on the right track in 1973; now I can see better where that 
track is headed. As I state in Chapter 1 of Simply Managing, the practice is 
fundamental and does not change—not ensuing 40 years. But my perception of it 
has.
! At least what I call “Managing  Naturally”  in the last chapter of the new book 
hasn’t changed. What has changed  is that now we have so much more managing 
unnaturally: “leaders”  who sit on “top”, measuring and then exercising their 
authority by remote control, instead of rolling up  their sleeves and facing the fact 
that good leadership is embedded in engaged management.
If this is not clear to you, let me suggest that you read  a really good book. It’s 
called Simply Managing.

© The author(s)
www.management-aims.com

My Own Book Review! M@n@gement, 18(2): 186-188

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