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112 of 182 people found the following review helpful: |
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How to build it to last |
May 14, 2007 |
| Reviewer:
Martin Schray
from West Chicago, IL
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Built To Last was an extremely thought provoking and eye opening read.
Built To Last studies some of the most successful (called the leading
companies) and the following companies (non-leaders in an industry).
The research for this book produced surprising results for the authors
(and the reader). The authors found the there were at least twelve
commonly held businesses beliefs that their research refuted. In
essence these dearly held business beliefs were myths. Here is a look at each of the twelve myths and a sound byte describing each: 1.
It takes a great idea to start a company Few visionary companies
started with a great idea. Many companies started without any specific
ideas (HP and Sony) and others were outright failures (3M). In fact a
great idea may lead to road of not being able to adapt. 2.
Visionary companies require great and charismatic visionary leaders A
charismatic leader in not required and, in fact, can be detrimental to
a company's long-term prospects. 3. The most successful
companies exist first and foremost to maximize profits Not true. Profit
counts, but is usually not at the top of the list. 4. Visionary
companies share a common subset of "correct" core values They all have
core values, but each is unique to a company and it's culture. 5. The only constant is change The core values can and often do last more then 100 years. 6. Blue-chip companies play it safe They take significant bet the company risks. 7.
Visionary companies are great places to work, for everyone These
companies are only great places to work if you fit the vision and
culture. 8. Highly successful companies make some of their best
moves by brilliant and complex strategic planning. They actually try a
bunch of stuff and keep what works. 9. Companies should hire
outside CEOs to stimulate fundamental change Most have had their change
agents come from within the system. 10. The most successful companies focus primarily on beating the competition. They focus on beating themselves. 11. You can't have your cake and eat it too. Decisions don't have to either or, but can be boths. 12. Companies become visionary primarily through "vision statements". Vision is not a statement it is the way you do business. I
would recommend this book to anyone engaged in developing and running a
business at any level. If you want to design, build and run a lasting
enterprise this book has some ideas and insights worth exploring.
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful: |
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Must-read for anyone interested in business |
May 14, 2007 |
| Reviewer:
Kanishk "Kanjoy"
from Cincinnati, OH
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This book is the result of an elaborative research and a great
data-analysis. It gives an insight into the some of the greatest
companies of the world in different fields and different time-periods.
Authors have done a great job in explaining and justifying their
research and data through the appendices and bibliography. A study of
all the existing companies to find the visionary ones is really a
daunting task and this research team has done a terrific job in
establishing a definition of a "visionary company".
Must-read for professionals at any level of the organization hierarchy!!!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful: |
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Add this book to your required reading list |
May 14, 2007 |
| Reviewer:
Louise McCauley
from Chicago, IL
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A visionary company, say the authors, is one that is the premier
organization in its field, one that has had a long standing impact on
the world, and has had an average stock-return performance of fifteen
times the general market since 1926. The authors of Built to Last spent
six years studying visionary companies in-depth to uncover the
underlying factors that helped them to outperform the competition. They
first polled hundreds of CEO's to find out what companies they most
esteemed. They then chose eighteen to profile in-depth and also
researched a competitor to compare them with.
Here are some of their findings about visionary companies:
· Visionary company founders take an architectural approach to
building their firms. They concentrate on the company's processes,
systems and values, not their products. They also develop their
managers and employees, so that the company survives long after the
visionary leader is gone.
· Ideals and core ideologies drive visionary companies, not
profits alone. Visionary companies have basic precepts that say, "This
is who we are; this is what we stand for; this is what we're all
about."
· Visionary companies commit to Big, Hairy, Audacious Goals
(BHAG's), that serve as unifying focal points for development. These
goals should be clear and compelling, involve risk, be consistent with
the core ideology of the company, and be so bold and exciting that
progress will continue even if leaders leave before the goal is
achieved. · Visionary companies have cult-like cultures. They are great
places for people to work, if the people "fit" into the company culture
and ideology.
· Visionary companies use home-grown management. Of the eighteen
companies studies, only four times did one of them go outside of the
firm for a CEO.
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