The First 90 Days: Critical Success Strategies for New Leaders at All Levels by Michael Watkins.
My newfound commute to and fro work has granted me the wonderful gift of having plenty of time to read. ;-p I picked up this book after seeing that J.D. Meier recommend it (http://blogs.msdn.com/jmeier/archive/2008/01/17/success-strategies.aspx) just around the time that I was looking to transition to my new job. Overall the book is pretty good. Akin to the situational leadership approach, Watkins breaks the environmental situation into four core types (STaRS), each requiring a different approach. Each chapter ends with a quick list of questions that try to get you to think about the your situation in regards to the topic of that chapter. If there was on thing I didn’t like is that it was too easy to read. I found myself reading through the chapters without stopping to reflect and really process the material and concepts. I think this is a common problem with these declarative leadership/business type books.
The big takeaways for me (in the context of starting a new job in a new organization) were
- Accomplish as much as you can early on. But make sure those quick wins are aligned with your long term goal.
- Focus in on what you can do early on. There probably is a lot that needs fixing, don’t spread yourself too thin.
- Figure out the best way to communicate with your new boss. You need to make sure you keep them in the loop/in the know. That’s really hard to do if you don’t use the medium they are most confortable with.
- Related to the item above, negotiate success. Make sure you clear up expectations on what and how you will be judged on with your boss. For me (in the geek context), this was a really good point. Back at UofM I was really working to automate IT solutions and get vision/scope defined for projects. It would be a bad assumption to go into this new job thinking I would be evaluated against how well I achieved those things (and some related others). If documentation isn’t important at this new place, and I spend a lot of time writing up/pre-planning, even though the end result is the system deployed it might seem like it “took to long” to my new boss.
- Take 100% responsibility for making the relationship work [with your boss]
On interesting thing about the book (admitting it could just be biased from my point of view) is that although the book was intended for “new leaders at all levels”, it seemed like the major focus of the book was about how to deal with the people above you. The implied hidden subtext seems to be that leadership is the ability to get things done despite the powers from above.




