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In crowds we have unison, in groups harmony. We want the single voice but not the single note that is the secret of the group.
Mary Parker Follett
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Mary Parker Follett
Age: 65 †
Born: 1868
Born: September 3
Died: 1933
Died: December 18
Businessperson
Philosopher
Political Scientist
Social Worker
Sociologist
Writer
Quincy
Massachusetts
Mary Parker
Unity
Notes
Harmony
Group
Groups
Single
Unison
Secret
Note
Voice
Crowds
More quotes by Mary Parker Follett
Law should seek far more than mere reconciliation it should be one of the great creative forces of our social life.
Mary Parker Follett
Leader and followers are both following the invisible leader-the common purpose.
Mary Parker Follett
Democracy is self-creating coherence.
Mary Parker Follett
Idealism and realism meet in the actual.
Mary Parker Follett
Concepts can never be presented to me merely, they must be knitted into the structure of my being, and this can only be done through my own activity.
Mary Parker Follett
Management is the art of getting things done through people.
Mary Parker Follett
It is of equal importance with the discovery of facts to know what to do with them.
Mary Parker Follett
The divorce of our so-called spiritual life from our daily activities is a fatal dualism.
Mary Parker Follett
Leadership is not defined by the exercise of power but by the capacity to increase the sense of power among those led. The most essential work of the leader is to create more leaders.
Mary Parker Follett
Power-over is resorted to time without number because people will not wait for the slower process of education.
Mary Parker Follett
The foreman today does not merely deal with trouble, he forestalls trouble. In fact, we don't think much of a foreman who is always dealing with trouble we feel that if he is doing his job properly, there won't be so much trouble.
Mary Parker Follett
Majority rule rests on numbers democracy rests on the well-grounded assumption that society is neither a collection of units nor an organism but a network of human relations.
Mary Parker Follett
I am convinced that any feeling of exaltation because we have people under us should be conquered, for I am sure that if we enjoy being over people, there will be something in our manner which will make them dislike being under us.
Mary Parker Follett
I do not think that we have psychological and ethical and economic problems. We have human problems, with psychological, ethical and economical aspects, and as many others as you like.
Mary Parker Follett
... orders come from the work, not work from the orders.
Mary Parker Follett
That is always our problem, not how to get control of people, but how all together we can get control of a situation.
Mary Parker Follett
All polishing is done by friction.
Mary Parker Follett
The most successful leader of all is the one who sees another picture not yet actualized. He sees the things which are not yet there... Above all, he should make his co-workers see that it is not his purpose which is to be achieved, but a common purpose, born of the desires and the activities of the group.
Mary Parker Follett
the best leaders try to train their followers themselves to become leaders. ... they wish to be leaders of leaders.
Mary Parker Follett
The ablest administrators do not merely draw logical conclusions from the array of facts of the past which their expert assistants bring to them, they have a vision of the future.
Mary Parker Follett