Publisher: Free Press, 1983, 432 pages
ISBN: 0-671-52800-9
Keywords: Strategy
In executive suites throughout America, The Change Masters has become one of the most talked-about books in years. The author Rosabeth Moss Kanter, is a professor at Harvard University's Business School and a leading advisor to many Fortune 500 companies. The key to an American corporate renaissance, says Kanter, lies in innovation, entrepreneurship and the development of "participative management" skills that encourage the use of new ideas arising from within the corporations itself. Kanter demonstrates how corporations that are "integrationist" (successful at stimulating the innovative capacity of their people) rather than "segmentalist" (so rigidly structured as to stifle innovation) are able to stay ahead of changing technologies and markets. The Change Masters looks behind the scenes at some of the most important companies in America, including Hewlett-Packard, General Electric, Polaroid, General Motors, Wang Laboratories, and Honeywell, to describe their organizational structures, their corporate cultures, and their specific strategies.
A bit too American, but I can understand why it is considered a classical book.
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