[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û |)H3oAOL4ZlcNBp=FroG]
º£Å¸¾Àí seagull manager[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û x)
GH];BA".qR(g"FroG]
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û bEJhasX+0*{CX]m9FroG]
½øÈë21ÊÀ¼Í£¬ËƺõÎÒÃǹ¤×÷ºÍÉú»îµÄ·½·½ÃæÃæ¶¼ÔÚ¹ú¼Ê»¯¡¢È«Çò»¯¡£Ð¼¼Êõ¡¢ÐÂÀíÄî²»¶ÏÓ¿È룬ÏëÒª×öÒ»¸ö¹ÜÀíÕßÒ²ÏԵò»ÄÇôÈÝÒ×ÁË¡£¾ÀíÃÇÐèÒª²»¶Ï½ÓÊÜÐÂÐ˵ļ¼ÊõºÍÀíÄ·ñÔò¾ÍÓпÉÄÜ»á³ÉΪ²»Ì«ÊÜ»¶ÓµÄseagull managerÁË¡£
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û ;€i;rA.q=]h"}[w8FroG]
Seagull Manager is a term first dating back to an 1988 Marketing article by Michael Madison, used to describe a management style of interacting with employees only when a problem arises, making hasty decisions about things they have little understanding of, then leaving others to deal with the mess they leave behind.
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û
Lw[R~d/,b+vD@*GuFroG]
Seagull Manager£¨º£Å¸¾Àí£©Õâһ˵·¨µÄ³öÏÖʼÓÚ1988ÄêÂõ¿Ë¶û•ÂóµÏÑ·ËùдµÄһƪÓйØÊг¡ÓªÏúµÄÎÄÕ£¬Ö¸ÄÇÖÖ³öÏÖÎÊÌâÁ˲ŸúÔ±¹¤¹µÍ¨µÄ¹ÜÀíģʽ£¬¹ÜÀíÕß¶ÔÓÚ×Ô¼º²»Ì«Á˽âµÄÊÂÎñ´Òæ×ö³ö¾ö²ß£¬È»ºó°ÑÀÃ̯×ÓÁô¸øÆäËûÈËÀ´´¦Àí¡£
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û GcZ&Gn2+HP2Ts}AFroG]
The term became more popular through a joke in Ken Blanchard's 1999 book Leadership and the One Minute Manager: "Seagull managers fly in, make a lot of noise, dump on everyone, then fly out."
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û ng/Drz$x@oF0W
d7FroG]
Õâ¸ö˵·¨ÔÚ1999ÄêÒòΪ¿Ï•²¼À¼²éµÂµÄÒ»±¾Êé¡¶Áìµ¼ÓëÒ»·ÖÖÓ¾Àí¡·ÖеÄÐÎÏóÃèÊö¶ø¸ü¼Ó×ߺ죬ÊéÀïÊÇÕâÑùдµÄ£º¡°º£Å¸¾ÀíÃǷɽøÀ´£¬ÖÆÔìÁ˺öàÔëÒô£¬°Ñÿ¸öÈ˸øËµÒ»±é£¬È»ºóÓÖ·É×ßÁË¡£¡±
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û Q-x3PfH~EF~hFroG]
[ÎÄÕ°æÈ¨ ½ûÖ¹×ªÔØ:¿¼ÊÔÓëÆÀ¼Û :l=vA
])L(LNN,FroG]