The Five Minds of a Manager
Gosling, J & Mintzberg, H. (2003). Harvard Business Review.
Managers are told: Be global and be local. Collaborate and compete. Change perpetually, and maintain order.
Make the numbers while nurturing your people. To be effective, managers need to consider the juxtapositions
in order to arrive at a deep integration of these seemingly contradictory concerns. That means they must
focus not only on what they have to accomplish but also on how they have to think. When the authors,
respectively the director of the Centre for Leadership Studies at the University of Exeter in the U.K. and
the Cleghorn Professor of Management Studies at McGill University in Montreal, set out to develop a masters
program for practicing managers, they saw that they could not rely on the usual MBA educational structure,
which divides the management world into discrete business functions such as marketing and accounting. They
needed an educational structure that encouraged synthesis rather than separation. Managing, they determined,
involves five tasks, each with its own mind-set: managing the self (the reflective mind-set); managing
organizations (the analytic mind-set); managing context (the worldly mind-set); managing relationships (the
collaborative mind-set); and managing change (the action mind-set). The program is built on the exploration
and integration of those five aspects of the managerial mind. The authors say it has proved powerful in the
classroom and insightful in practice.
