Recently, we have seen England's venerable Queen Elizabeth I portrayed in popular movies as both a wise supporting character and powerful leading lady. Now, thanks to historian and author Alan Axelrod, we can not only see the 16th-century monarch as a single woman who turned the fortunes of an entire nation around--we can apply many of the traits and practices of Good Queen Bess to our own business lives. "You can learn that being a leader is being a leader, whether your enterprise is a Renaissance kingdom, a small business, a major corporation, a corporate department, or a three-person work group with a job to do," Axelrod writes in Elizabeth I, CEO. Like other authors who relate the conduct and writings of a historical figure to situations in the modern world (including himself in Patton on Leadership), Axelrod uses Elizabeth's behavior and words to frame a blueprint for corporate survival, personal image building, staff development, control, and--ultimately--success. The author draws 136 pointers from Elzabeth's life, each amplified with lively, germane anecdotes. Among them: "Control the Message, not the Messenger," "No Leader Is a Solo Act," and "Forgive, but Don't Forget." --Howard Rothman
Alan Axelrod is the author of the nationally best-selling Patton on Leadership: Strategic Lessons for Corporate Warfare. He has also written several of the popular Complete Idiot’s Guide books, such as The Complete Idiot’s Guide to the American Revolution and The Complete Idiot’s Guide to 20th Century History.
Narrator Nelson Runger is praised by Library Journal for “The cheerful, sonorous timber of [his] voice and the unfaltering, even pace of his delivery ...”