"Doug Eadie's Changing By Design is an impressive achievement. Not
only does it make for fascinating reading, it can be put to
practical use in producing significant innovation in any nonprofit
organization, including associations. Changing By Design will
become an indispensable tool for nonprofit leaders and managers,
and I will recommAnd it to colleagues with enthusiasm." —R.
Williams Taylor, CAE, President, American Society of Association
Executives
"In this turbulent age, Changing By Design offers a refreshing
vision and practical guide for nonprofit organizations to
concentrate their leadership talents and creative energies to
become truly dynamic 'engines of innovation.'" —Paul J.
Greeley, Jr., CAE, President, American Chamber of Commerce
Executives
"What a masterful blAnding of theory and practice! Doug Eadie
has not only made a significant contribution to the field of
nonprofit leadership, he has also provided nonprofit practitioners
with down-to-earth guidance that they can put to immediate use in
helping their organizations take command of change. Doug's book
should be in every nonprofit leader's resource library."
—Professor Benjamin Hodes, Ph.D., Dean, Division of
Continuing Education, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
"Eadie has provided a fresh new approach to change management.
His book will be a very useful tool in the education of nonprofit
leaders, both in university and practice settings."
—Professor Richard R. Edwards, Ph. D., Dean, School of Social
Work, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"The most striking feature, among many, of Douglas Eadie's
Changing By Design is the prominience he accords humility among the
most necessary traits of a successful chief executive. After nearly
a quarter-century's management experience in the not-for-profit
sector, I am indebted to Doug for his emphasis upon this
all-too-often overlooked imperative for truly effective
leadership." —Timothy D. Armbruster, President and CEO,
Baltimore Community Foundation and Morris Goldseker Foundation of
Maryland
"Doug Eadie has built on his own experience in hundreds of board
retreats to put much of his unique knowledge of planning and
leadership of nonprofit organizations into this 'how-to' book. For
a nonprofit board which is ready to make changes, this resource is
as handy as a road map for a driver." —Professor David A.
Luhrsen, Ph. D., Dean, Rinker School of Business, Palm Beach
Atlantic College
"In a time of unparalleled change for management, Doug Eadie
continues to be a pathfinder whose writing helps us all see a clear
vision of what our trail is and how we can achieve it. I recommAnd
that Doug be a partner in change just as we have used him in our
associations." —Paul C. Pritchard, President and CEO,
National parks and Conservation Association
"A very readable and insightful look at a subject often
overlooked in the discussion of leadership and change. The
nonprofit chief executive ought to make Eadie's book required
reading if he or she is contemplating innovation in the evolving
organization. A valuable resource for anyone thinking about getting
involved in the field of nonprofit management and the leadership of
tomorrow." —Thomas Urban, Executive Director, Professional
Development and Regulatory Programs, American Public Transit
Association
"In Changing By Design, the aspiring or practicing nonprofit
chief executive is convinced of the insight Douglas Eadie has
acquired regarding the difficult challenges of leadership.
Moreover, the discussion of the 3CAP approach to the management of
change, focusing on the capacities to lead, innovate, and
implement, is instructive and reassuring to those who envision more
productive organizations. Douglas Eadie inspires and prompts the
imagination of chief executives who are willing to risk going about
the important work of improving their organizations by taking
conscious command of the change process." —Peter P. Horschak,
Ed. D., SuperintAndent, Albuquerque Public Schools, Albuquerque,
New Mexico
"Doug Eadie has the courage to take us where others 'fear to
tread.' In addition to a sound and workable approach to managing
organizational change, he also gives appropriate attention to the
importance of the spiritual journey of the executive as the 'leader
in charge of change.'" —Kenneth McLaughlin, President and
CEO, Greater Cleveland YMCA