Sale

Creative Destruction : Why Companies That Are Built to Last Underperform the Market--And How to Successfully Transform Them

Regular price $9.90 $4.90 51% off
Unit price
per

Dynamic strategies for corporate transformation

Creative Destruction challenges conventional wisdom of long-lasting corporations, showing that even the best-run companies cannot sustain market-beating performance for more than 10-15 years. Based on extensive research, Foster and Kaplan propose radical changes for corporations to transform rather than incrementally improve in order to sustain superior returns. The book offers new ideas and a fresh perspective on corporate culture and change. It is recommended for entrepreneurs and business leaders looking to transform their organizations and stay competitive in changing markets.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.
Sale

Creative Destruction : Why Companies That Are Built to Last Underperform the Market--And How to Successfully Transform Them

Regular price $9.90 $4.90 51% off
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780385501330
Estimated First-hand Retail Price: $38.50
Publisher: Broadway Business
Date of Publication: 2001-04-03
Format: Hardback
Related Collections: Business, Economics
Goodreads rating: 3.69
(rated by 81 readers)

Special Offer

Buy 3 Preloved Items Below S$10 and Get Another Free

Discount applied automatically when you add them to your cart!

Description

Turning conventional wisdom on its head, a Senior Partner and an Innovation Specialist from McKinsey & Company debunk the myth that high-octane, built-to-last companies can continue to excel year after year and reveal the dynamic strategies of discontinuity and creative destruction these corporations must adopt in order to maintain excellence and remain competitive.

In striking contrast to such bibles of business literature as In Search of Excellence and Built to Last, Richard N. Foster and Sarah Kaplan draw on research they conducted at McKinsey & Company of more than one thousand corporations in fifteen industries over a thirty-six-year period. The industries they examined included old-economy industries such as pulp and paper and chemicals, and new-economy industries like semiconductors and software. Using this enormous fact base, Foster and Kaplan show that even the best-run and most widely admired companies included in their sample are unable to sustain their market-beating levels of performance for more than ten to fifteen years. Foster and Kaplan's long-term studies of corporate birth, survival, and death in America show that the corporate equivalent of El Dorado, the golden company that continually outperforms the market, has never existed. It is a myth.

Corporations operate with management philosophies based on the assumption of continuity; as a result, in the long term, they cannot change or create value at the pace and scale of the markets. Their control processes, the very processes that enable them to survive over the long haul, deaden them to the vital and constant need for change. Proposing a radical new business paradigm, Foster and Kaplan argue that redesigning the corporation to change at the pace and scale of the capital markets rather than merely operate well will require more than simple adjustments. They explain how companies like Johnson and Johnson , Enron, Corning, and GE are overcoming cultural "lock-in" by transforming rather than incrementally improving their companies. They are doing this by creating new businesses, selling off or closing down businesses or divisions whose growth is slowing down, as well as abandoning outdated, ingrown structures and rules and adopting new decision-making processes, control systems, and mental models. Corporations, they argue, must learn to be as dynamic and responsive as the market itself if they are to sustain superior returns and thrive over the long term.

In a book that is sure to shake the business world to its foundations, Creative Destruction, like Re-Engineering the Corporation before it, offers a new paradigm that will change the way we think about business.


Author: Richard Foster
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 366
Publisher: Broadway Business
Publication Date: 03 Apr 2001
Condition guide
Availability
 
(0 in cart)

You may also like

Dynamic strategies for corporate transformation

Creative Destruction challenges conventional wisdom of long-lasting corporations, showing that even the best-run companies cannot sustain market-beating performance for more than 10-15 years. Based on extensive research, Foster and Kaplan propose radical changes for corporations to transform rather than incrementally improve in order to sustain superior returns. The book offers new ideas and a fresh perspective on corporate culture and change. It is recommended for entrepreneurs and business leaders looking to transform their organizations and stay competitive in changing markets.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.