This is going to be a concise review, because this is a concise book which is useful for one very simple reason: it highlights, and takes apart, one of the most insidious dynamics in all human communication. You don’t have to be a manager to appreciate this (I, for one, have generally been on the receiving end of management in the workplace). It’s a fact of human interaction.
Have you ever had one of those conversations that wears you out? You know, those exchanges where your interlocutor arrives burdened down with troubles and leaves practically skipping with relief and joy while you are left feeling like a wet dishrag on its last use?
You might not know what just happened, but the One Minute Manager does. You’ve just been given a monkey, or possibly several. Hell, you might just have invited that monkey onto your shoulders yourself.
In the One Minute Manager’s world, monkeys mean problems: practical, material, emotional, spiritual. They clamber, happily and indiscriminately, from shoulder to shoulder, settling on the backs of anyone willing to carry them. We all have our share of monkeys, but the trick is to know which are truly yours. And this excellent (if occasionally rather cheesy) book aims to give you the tools you need.
Unlike my colleague John, who has given us his thoughts on Blanchard and Co. I find the One Minute Manager extremely useful in everyday interactions with friends, colleagues, comrades.
The One Minute Manager Meets the Monkey is a book about managers who