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Wear Clean Underwear: Business Wisdom from Mom

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Columnist and consultant Rhonda Abrams believes today's most successful businesses are shifting from a patriarchal style of leadership to one in which characteristics such as growth, development, maturity, and nurturing--all traits traditionally associated more often with mothers than fathers--have moved to the forefront. Wear Clean Underwear: Using Mom's Fundamental Lessons to Run an Extraordinary Business is her light-hearted but utterly serious examination of this continuing trend, matching familiar motherly maxims like "How do you know you won't like it, if you've never tried it?" and "Don't get too big for your britches" with actual managerial practices at companies such as Nordstrom, Kinko's, and 3M. "Moms everywhere have developed an almost universal language to achieve their goals and instill common values," she writes.
Virtually everyone's mother at one time or another told them to "Clean your plate, children are starving in China" or whatever country happened to be in the news. Think about all the lessons in that one little line: don't waste your resources, understand that you are more fortunate than others, empathize with those who have less.
In this clever volume, Abrams shows how such wisdom can be both relevant and useful in today's business environment. --Howard Rothman

227 pages, Hardcover

First published January 19, 1999

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Rhonda Abrams

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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3 reviews1 follower
December 26, 2025
Not as relevant in today's business world. She had some decent advice.
32 reviews2 followers
August 11, 2009
This is a great business book but the lessons can be applied to home, church, or any organization one might be involved with. Abrams takes many of the old bromides that our mothers used on us and applies them to business/management.

Some of the chapters are: How Do You Know You Don't Like It When You've Never Tried It?; I Don't Care Who Made This Mess, Just Clean It Up; Say You're Sorry; Share; It's Not the End of the World; and more.

Some might think that she is into just touchy-feely things but Abrams is a successful management consultant. She explains this a little bit on page 133 - "I believe in capitalism. But capitalism that is based on greed, not profit, destroys the whole system. That's not capitalism. That's just greed. And it's bad for everyone."

A great book and like I said, it can be applied to many different areas.
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