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Revival of the Fittest: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Managers Remake

2010-04-09 
基本信息·出版社:Harvard Business School Press ·页码:203 页 ·出版日期:2003年05月 ·ISBN:1578519934 ·条形码:9781578519934 ·装帧:精装 · ...
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Revival of the Fittest: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Managers Remake 去商家看看

 Revival of the Fittest: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Managers Remake Them


基本信息·出版社:Harvard Business School Press
·页码:203 页
·出版日期:2003年05月
·ISBN:1578519934
·条形码:9781578519934
·装帧:精装
·正文语种:英语
·外文书名:成功不坠

内容简介 在线阅读本书

Will Your Organization Still Be Here in Ten Years?

It's a familiar story: A company rises to become an industry leader. Competitors try to emulate it. Analysts rave about it. The CEO's picture is splashed across magazine covers. Then the company stumbles, profits erode, and the stock plummets. How does this happen? Why do good companies so often go bad? More important, what can you do to prevent it from happening to your company?

In Revival of the Fittest, Donald N. Sull takes a provocative look at corporate failure and proposes a practical new model for effecting change that can vastly increase your organization's lifespan. Ironically, argues Sull, leaders sow the seeds of failure during a company's most successful times, when they make a set of commitments-whether to a core strategy, a key customer, or an innovative manufacturing method-that constitute the company's success formula. Managers become so married to the formula that they can't divorce themselves from it when the competitive situation changes. They respond to the future by doing more of what worked in the past-a phenomenon Sull calls "active inertia."

Based on extensive global research into successful and failed transformations across many industries, Revival of the Fittest introduces a three-step model for making transforming commitments-actions that prevent managers from reinforcing old behaviors in the face of change. Sull identifies five areas in which transforming commitments can be anchored-strategic frames, processes, relationships, resources, and values-and provides diagnostic tests, hands-on tools, and real company examples to show how managers can:




Gauge their company's susceptibility to active inertia
Determine which commitment is right for a specific situation
Appoint the best person to lead the charge
Ensure that the new commitment sticks
Avoid common mistakes that can sabotage the transformation effort
Weigh the personal risks associated with leading corporate change

In an unpredictable marketplace, commitments can make and break a company. But Sull shows that corporate demise is not inevitable. Through transforming commitments, revival of the fittest is possible-and managers can make the difference.

Donald N. Sull is Assistant Professor of Business Administration in the Entrepreneurial Management area at Harvard Business School.

作者简介 Donald N. Sull is Assistant Professor of Business Administration in the Entrepreneurial Management area at Harvard Business School.
媒体推荐 Financial Times, May 12 2003
"a rounded account of...how to turn stale strategies into moist, wealth-creating business models."

Economist, May 31 2003
"argues that good firms go bad when they suffer from 'active inertia'...their values become dogmas, and their resources millstones."

Toronto Globe and Mail, July 16 2003
"fascinating...will prod you to see leadership anew, as a series of commitments that must be carefully managed."

International Herald Tribune, July 26, 2003
"chock-full of compelling insights about how golden companies have been derailed and a select few have gotten back on track"


专业书评 Financial Times, May 12 2003
"a rounded account of...how to turn stale strategies into moist, wealth-creating business models."

Economist, May 31 2003
"argues that good firms go bad when they suffer from 'active inertia'...their values become dogmas, and their resources millstones."

Toronto Globe and Mail, July 16 2003
"fascinating...will prod you to see leadership anew, as a series of commitments that must be carefully managed."

International Herald Tribune, July 26, 2003
"chock-full of compelling insights about how golden companies have been derailed and a select few have gotten back on track"

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