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Good To Great

Jim Collins

$55

Hardback

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English
Century
01 November 2001
Jim Collins, bestselling author of Built to Last returns with Good to Great, a look at what it takes to succeed in business and how a good company can become a great one.

Can a good company become a great one? If so, how?

After a five-year research project, Jim Collins concludes that good to great can and does happen.

In this book, he uncovers the underlying variables that enable any type of organisation to make the leap from good to great while other organisations remain only good.

Rigorously supported by evidence, his findings are surprising - at times even shocking - to the modern mind.

Good to Great achieves a rare distinction- a management book full of vital ideas that reads as well as a fast-paced novel. It is widely regarded as one of the most important business books ever written.
By:  
Imprint:   Century
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 242mm,  Width: 164mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   522g
ISBN:   9780712676090
ISBN 10:   0712676090
Pages:   324
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Undergraduate ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Good is the enemy of great; level 5 leadership; first who - then what; confront the brutal facts (yet never lose faith); hedgehog concept; a culture of discipline; technology accelerators; the flywheel and the doom loop; from good to great to built to last.

Jim Collins left the Stanford Graduate School of Business in 1995 to set up a management laboratory in Colarado. He has worked with senior executives and CEOs from over 100 corporations including Starbucks Coffee, Time Warner, Johnson & Johnson and E-loan.com. He is co-author of the best-selling Built to Last - which has been on the Business Week bestseller list for 57 months, sold 500,000 copies in the US alone and has been translated into 17 languages.

Reviews for Good To Great

In 1996 Jim Collins, the author of the US business bestseller Built to Last, was challenged to think more deeply about what makes a great company. 'The companies you wrote about were, for the most part, always great,' came a chance comment, at a conference. 'But what about the vast majority of companies that wake up partway through life and realise they're good, but not great?' This seed of an idea was to grow to occupy Collins, formerly an academic, for the next five years. From his 'management laboratory' in Boulder, Colorado, he set to work to find out whether a merely good company could become great - or whether the disease of 'just being good' was incurable. His first step was to assemble a group of 21 researchers, who then spent six months in intense financial analysis, sifting out from the Fortune 500 list a set of 11 'good-to-great' companies. In the years 1965 to 1995, these all showed 15-year cumulative stock returns at or below the general stock market; then, after a transition point, cumulative returns at least three times the market over the next 15 years. Collins also selected two sets of comparison companies: direct (those in the same industries which did not achieve great results) and unsustained (those which shifted from good to great, and back to good). That was just the start of a myth-exploding research project, now presented in this clearly written and easily read book. It shows that companies that made the 'great' grade rarely had celebrity leaders - in fact, writes Collins, 'going for a high-profile outside change agent is negatively correlated with a sustained transformation', precisely because celebrities are more often concerned with their own egos than the enduring calibre of the company they run. Instead, individuals who run 'great' companies tend to be self-effacing and limelight-shy. Other factors for greatness are shown to be the ability to recruit the right people at an early stage, maintain faith in an end goal while confronting hard facts, develop a culture of discipline, apply carefully selected technologies, build momentum and establish a purpose which goes beyond simply making money. This is a fascinating study, drawing on research insights which apply to other areas of life as well as business. (Kirkus UK)


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