Tough calls : making the right decisions in challenging times

Author(s): Allan Leighton

Business Finance Management

We all make decisions every day. Most of them are pretty straightforward, but every so often there are some really tough calls. In business the choices that executives are sometimes faced with can make the difference between acclaimed success and ongoing prosperity, and humiliating failure and financial disaster. In Tough Calls, leading businessman Allan Leighton focuses on specific decisions he has made in the course of his career - at ASDA, Royal Mail and elsewhere - and describes the thought processes behind them. He also talks to many others in the know, from Sir Stuart Rose and Sir Terry Leahy to Adam Crozier at ITV and Stephen Hester at RBS. Taking into account facts that were known at the time, other interrelated factors and the potentially high-risk consequences, this line-up of top executives outline their approaches to breaking down often highly complex problems into achievable solutions.

General Information

  • : 9781847940537
  • : Cornerstone
  • : Random House Business Books
  • : 0.368
  • : 01 August 2011
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 30 September 2011
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Allan Leighton
  • : Paperback
  • : Airport / Ireland / Export ed
  • : 658
  • : 288

More About The Product

Allan Leighton began his career at Mars confectionery, where he rose to become group marketing director before leaving to join the loss-making ASDA supermarket chain. There he was credited with turning what he once described as a basket case into a highly successful company that was sold to US retail giant Wal-Mart for œ6.7 billion in 1999.When he left his position as president and chief executive of Wal-Mart Europe he famously coined the phrase 'going plural' as he took on non-executive positions at a string of companies, including lastminute.com, Leeds United, Bhs, BSkyB and Selfridges. He was chairman of Royal Mail Group until 2009, and is currently non-executive director of BSkyB and George Weston, as well as deputy chairman of Selfridges & Co. His first book, On Leadership, was a best-seller when it appeared in 2007.