Sunday, December 29, 2013

LEADERSHIP REQUIRES EXTRA INNINGS just published


My book is now available at amazon.com and the e-book version can be purchased in early January, 2014. Proceeds from its sale are being donated to the Jackie Robinson Foundation for scholarships to deserving students.

For more information, please visit www.eichassociated.com

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Directors & Boards publishes "Top 10 reasons for not selecting someone as board chair"

A special thanks  goes to Jim Kristie and his team at Directors & Boards for publishing my article in their Third Quarter 2013 issue. Titled the "Top 10 reasons for not selecting someone as board chair," the article is applicable to both for-profit and non-profit boards of directors, trustees, regents or visitors.


Friday, August 16, 2013

The Journal of Values-Based Leadership Publishes Ritch's Article on "Blaming"

Special thanks go to Elizabeth Gingerich, editor of The Journal of Values-Based Leadership, and her editorial board for publishing my article on "blaming others."

The title of the article is "Playing Above the Breaks..."

Here is the link if you'd like to read the piece: http://www.valuesbasedleadershipjournal.com.

Saturday, August 3, 2013

"Want a Proven Leader: Hire a Veteran" commentary published in Pacific Coast Business Times

To read my entire article "Want a Proven Leader at your Firm: Hire a Veteran" please click on the following link: http://www.pacbiztimes.com/2013/08/02/oped-want-a-proven-leader-at-your-firm-hire-a-veteran/

Many thanks to the folks at the Business Times for their continued goodwill, cooperation and recognition of our men and women in uniform and retired.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

"Leaders Do Not Give Orders" is Cover Story in Brazilian Magazine

Many thanks to Voce S/A reporter Lucas Rossi and Thos. Nelson Publishing, Brazil's Samuel Coto for seeking my perspective on leadership, based on my book Real Leaders Don't Boss.

The cover story of a recent issue of Voce S/A featured my book which was based, in part, on an interview Lucas Rossi conducted with me.

It has been a distinct pleasure and honor for me to interact with various Brazilian media and publishers.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Real Leaders Don't Boss featured in Forbes, Brazil and in Brazilian Newspapers

Some of the interviews conducted with Brazilian media may be found in the following links. A special thanks is extended to the highly professional and very responsive Samuel Coto, Acquisitions Editor at Thomas Nelson Brazil and their superb media relations team that acted as intermediaries. 

The leadership article in Forbes, Brazil was complemented by an interative online feature as well.

 http://forbesbrasil.br.msn.com/carreira/veja-dicas-para-ser-um-verdadeiro-l%C3%ADder-sem-lan%C3%A7ar-m%C3%A3o-do-autoritarismo

 http://clipping.cservice.com.br/cliente/visualizarmateria.aspx?materiaId=17909506&canalId=60561&clienteId=SaCBUTdtBDI=&end

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Pacific Coast Business Times Published My Article on Dangers of Logo Changes


Logo Changes Are Fraught with Danger

As a leadership and management consultant, I am often asked for advice by organizations contemplating altering or replacing their logos. From experience and instinct, I usually urge caution. I have found that most logos are changed for political or personal reasons rather than strategic reasons.

That said, there are indeed certain circumstances that may constitute valid reasons for changing your organization’s logo as part of a larger rebranding initiative. Here are three of the more compelling ones:

1.     A merger, acquisition or dramatically altered marketplace that promises to significantly change your organization
2.     The transfiguring of your business strategy, corporate culture, marketplace positioning and your very raison d’ĂȘtre
3.      A major crisis that is shaking your institution’s foundation by damaging its reputation and alienating key constituencies

Having been directly involved in highly successful rebranding efforts in both the for-profit and not-for-profit world that included a reexamination of several diverse firm’s existing logos, I am inherently suspicious whenever marketers or executives push to change their institution’s logos.

A careful review of the literature reveals that the higher education, hospital and private industry landscape is cluttered with botched rebranding efforts.

Several examples of highly contested logo changes in the last few years are worth recalling. They include the GAP, UC Berkeley, Tropicana, Pepsi, Starbucks and many other organizations. While each case is different in some respects from the others, marketer and executive egos played a larger role than is desirable. And, in most of these cases, the organizations were forced by consumer outrage to return to their previous logo.

It has often been said, “experience is the best teacher.” I was fortunate in my formative years to work with three excellent organizations: Fleishman Hillard, KPMG and Burson Marsteller. They taught me to tread carefully when dealing with logos and rebranding initiatives because consumers are often fickle and unpredictable. It is one of the reasons I believe in market research that asks consumers what they currently think rather than what their future views may be.

Before embarking on a logo change, I suggest that your organization consider the following key questions:
·      Is the existing logo not fulfilling its stated purposes in brand building?
·      Is your marketing director or vice president trying to make his or her own personal imprint on the institution by advocating a logo change?
·      Is the logo a source of major controversy among your most important constituencies?
·      Is the logo outdated or particularly challenging to reproduce?
·      What specific marketing objectives are you seeking with a new “look”?
·      Are you fully prepared for a potentially significant negative reaction, even after adequate market testing?
·      Are you willing to underwrite and cost and inconvenience of a logo change?
·      Is your marketing team singularly focused on and highly skilled in continuing to build your brand and keeping it alive by consistently penetrating your consumers’ mind? Are they successfully communicating your brand promise 24/7?

Branding guru and Stamats executive Bob Sevier, one of the nation’s most prominent, values-driven and visionary marketing experts, often reminded me that even the best-designed logos are but graphic symbols—every one of which requires compelling stories, interesting anecdotes, desirable experiences and fond memories associated with ideals to make them sustainable and differentiated.  In a word, a logo has to have meaning. A beautifully designed book cover may get you inside but it is the content that must capture your imagination and hold your attention.

I believe logos are one way a brand is expressed, but in the larger scheme of things logos are less important than how organizations act. Multi-platform marketing is about the brand. The challenge, it seems to me, is to integrate the brand across multi platforms. I found that it is more difficult to establish a brand across multi platforms (e.g. many audiences) in higher education than in large corporations because the stakeholders in a university are more independent and more diversified in their purpose.

Al Ries and Jack Trout, authors of the best selling book, The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, remind us that changing your logo won’t change the brand in the consumer’s mind. But as the Alexander White Consultancy suggests, years of investment in building the brand, consistent use and full compliance among all visual elements, sharpened focus and penetration will.

Rather than taking the time and spending the money involved in redesigning your logo (and concurrently taking your eye off the real “ball” – to strengthen your brand), it is frequently far more productive to challenge your marketing team to intensify their efforts to further permeate the minds of your most important customer groups.




Wednesday, April 10, 2013

My Review of Jay Bilas' book, Toughness


It has been said often “experience is the best teacher” and I have often said, “real leadership skill is forged by overcoming adversity.” Jay Bilas dispels many myths about “toughness” in his excellent book, one that is especially valuable for anyone seeking success in his or her chosen career.

Sports buffs, military history lovers, science reporters and middle managers everywhere take note: this volume offers numerous examples you can use in your workplace, home, church or next volunteer assignment.

Whether you enjoy sports or not and whether or not you’re a fan of Coach K, John Wooden, Jackie Robinson, Jim or John Harbaugh, Colin Powell, Jack Welch and many others who developed the required “toughness” to excel in life, you will nonetheless profit as I have from reading what Jay Bilas has written.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Pacific Standard Publishes my Article on SECDEF Hagel


To read the entire article, please click on link: http://www.psmag.com/blogs/the-101/until-the-adjectives-change-expect-gridlock-53430/  A sincere "thank you" to Pacific Standard Magazine's online editor Michael Todd and The Hill's opinion editor Emmanuel Touhey.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Strategic Health Care Marketing published my article: "Letting Go Is Hard to Do...Knowing When to Leave Your Job"


On the morning of December 12, 1941, just five days after Pearl Harbor, newly minted Brigadier General Dwight D. Eisenhower was summoned from Texas to meet with Army Chief of Staff General George Marshall. He was directed to present Marshall with a strategy within just a few hours to lead to victory in the Pacific. Without delay, Eisenhower drafted a three-page memo outlining his strategy. His action is illustrative of one of the most important leadership tools too seldom used in health care marketing today: strategy.

Executives, managers and others in transition (for example, many of President Obama’s first-term marketing campaign staffers) need a personal strategy to guide them in their careers. Their strategy should have benchmarks by which they can judge whether the time is nearing for them to move on in their careers and not overstay their welcome.

Successful health care marketers typically possess a strong strategic bent, substantial conceptual skills, an engaging personality, and proven analytical ability. Yet few seemingly deploy personal strategies in their own careers. According to executive search firm Spencer Stuart, chief marketing officers across all industries average just 43 months in a particular job. This relatively short tenure suggests that marketers would definitely benefit from a strategy to guide them in their professional pursuits.

You, as a health care marketer, must be able to discern when the time has come to leave behind a comfortable, challenging, or captivating job-however difficult that may seem. Knowing when it’s time to say goodbye is a sensibility that’s often lacking. A career strategy can help immensely.

Robben Fleming told me about five years into his job as president of the University of Michigan that a decade was a “pretty good rule of thumb” as it enables leaders to accomplish most of their goals and hopefully avoid “wearing out one’s welcome.” Fleming left the university to become president of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting 10 years after he arrived in Ann Arbor. Like Eisenhower, Fleming served in World War II and clearly grasped his mission. He had an overarching strategy to succeed and the requisite skills to ably guide the university during the turbulent Vietnam War years of student protests.

When you, as a marketing vice president, director or manager, feel the need to make a career move, chances are your instincts are probably correct. Even when close friends or family members may not perceive your instincts as logical or strategic, it doesn’t mean they are not valid.

Achieving most of the goals you originally projected is an excellent benchmark for coming to terms with a timetable to move on. But there are other cogent reasons for doing so. Consider if any of these situations applies to you—or your boss:

§                  You have become seduced by the trappings of success.
§                  The relationship with your supervisor is in a downward spiral.
§                  Your skills have begun to erode.
§                  Your organization has become increasingly unreceptive to your ideas.
§                  You have become isolated from key constituencies.
§                   It’s becoming increasingly difficult to alter your course quickly.
§                  The organization’s culture is not in sync with your principles.
§                  You seem to have lost passion and vision.


The truth is that people look for new career opportunities for many reasons, and they differ with each individual. Whatever the situation, keep in mind five key guidelines about leaving one job and settling into a new one successfully:

§ Don’t burn your bridges. Keeping relationships at your old hospital or health system intact may help you in many ways in the future, especially if you plan to stay in the same industry.

§ Leave something important behind you—something you can be especially proud of, not simply something to put on your resume. That will contribute to your own sense of purpose.

§ Take the lessons you learned and apply them to your new situation, but be careful not to treat your new job as your old one. Be open to a new environment and new ways of doing things. You have great skills to bring with you, but they will be used in a different context, so don’t expect people and situations to be the same. Learn the lay of the land before instituting too many changes.

§ Be friendly and respectful to all the new people you meet. Wherever you go, some people see new hires as a threat. Treating everyone respectfully will help you earn the trust and support you need and will let people see you as a welcome member of the team. Be open, receptive and forge an honest working environment.

§ Challenge yourself to learn fresh skills in your new position so you can contribute to your organization in important state-of-the-art ways to bolster its competitive advantage.

When you confront this question of whether the time has come to move on, perhaps Ralph Waldo Emerson’s words of wisdom will help: “To map out a course of action and follow it to an end, requires some of the same courage which a soldier needs.”

Ritch K. Eich, Ph.D, former Editorial Advisory Board member, is the author of Real Leaders Don’t Boss (Career Press) and served as the chief marketing or public affairs executive at St. Joseph Mercy Health System, Indiana University Medical Center and Stanford Medical Center. He is Principal of Eich Associated, www.eichassociated.com.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Monday, January 21, 2013

LA Business Journal Publishes Ritch's Article


Los Angeles Business Journal, January 14, 2013

Basketball Legend Fits Golf to a ‘T’

By RITCH K. EICH

Since 1959, I have closely followed Jerry West’s illustrious career. Next month, I will once again follow him to Pacific Palisades as a volunteer marshal at the 2013 Northern Trust Open at the legendary Riviera Country Club.

West’s imprint as the industrious and personable executive director of this annual PGA Tour stop in Los Angeles has been evident since he was appointed nearly three years ago: The gallery has grown, corporate support has risen, enthusiasm has soared and, who knows, maybe West can even lure Tiger Woods back to Brentwood.

Legions of sportswriters have described the Mountaineer and Laker great’s numerous leadership skills far better than I can. But, most pro golfers would do well to emulate just a few: West always appreciated and recognized his fans, big or small; no one worked more tirelessly to improve himself and his team; he cared deeply about the average Joe or Jane, and he never forgot about the least fortunate of us in society.

During the past 30 years, my wife and I have played a small part of the British Open, the TPC Championship, the PGA Championship, the U.S. Open, the Tournament of Champions and such links as La Quinta, Torrey Pines, Pebble Beach, Oakland Hills, Congressional, Sawgrass and Sherwood, but there is no place like Riviera and its fabled history. To say we have enjoyed the experience would be a gross understatement. And while change is an important part of organizational life (including that of the Professional Golfers’ Association of America) that must be embraced and channeled to constructive ends, some traditions are also important.

I fully understand that the tour is the pro golfer’s livelihood, and stellar performance equates with having sponsors and securing big purses. But it is also true that pro golfers are in the entertainment business and without the interest and support of thousands of spectators, their largesse would quickly evaporate. The classy West understood these facts as a professional basketball star, coach, general manager, adviser and now as L.A. golf executive.

Our world has changed dramatically since Sept. 11 and the resulting enhanced security measures at sporting events (including those just implemented at the USC campus) are necessary. Understanding these restraints, I offer five recommendations to the PGA and their pro golfers in the hope they will thoughtfully consider West’s leadership skills for improving the fan experience, and the health and well-being of the game of golf beginning in February at storied Riviera:

n  When the pros approach the tee box or are just about at the green, encourage them to lift up their heads and smile, or nod or say thanks for your help (to the volunteers) or thanks for coming (to those in the gallery).
n  When the gallery applauds a great shot, have them smile more often at the gallery and tip their cap (believe it or not, this longstanding gesture happens less all the time).
n  When a pro heads to the practice range or practice tee before or after he plays, acknowledge the crowd gathered there in some pleasant way.
n  When a would-be pro is in Q school (qualifying school), include a module about etiquette and how historically it has been an important part of the game.
n  When a pro completes his round, encourage him to spend 10 to 15 minutes greeting families, especially those with small children, and signing autographs.

When West accepted his leadership role at Riviera, it was not for show. It was one very concrete way Mr. Clutch could pay back to the people of Los Angeles for their having heaped 40 years of love on him.

Hopefully, the golf pros coming to Riviera will follow suit and realize that the L.A.-based charities and the people who depend upon them are the real winners. In the end, isn’t leadership all about giving?

Ritch K. Eich, principal of Thousand Oaks-based management consulting firm Eich Associated, is author of “Real Leaders Don’t Boss.”