Good Profit
How Creating Value for Others Built One of the World's Most Successful Companies
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- CHF 3.00
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- CHF 3.00
Descrizione dell’editore
A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
In 1961, Charles Koch joined his father's Wichita-based company, then valued at $21 million. Six years later, following his father's death, he was named chairman of the board and CEO of Koch Industries, Inc. Today, Koch Industries' estimated worth is $100 billion - making it one of the largest private companies in the world. Koch exceeds the S&P 500's five-decade growth by 27-fold, and plans to double its value on average every six years.
What exactly does this company do and why is it so remarkably profitable? While you won't find the Koch name on your stain-resistant carpet, stretch denim jeans, the connectors in your smartphone or your baby's ultra-absorbent diapers, Charles Koch's Market-Based Management® system, intended to generate good profit, drove these innovations and many more.
Good profit results from products and services that customers vote for freely with their money; products that help improve people's lives. It results from a culture where employees are empowered to act entrepreneurially to discover customer preferences and the best ways to satisfy them. Good profit is the earnings that follow when long-term value is created for everyone - customers, employees, shareholders and society. Readers will learn to:
· Craft a vision for how a business can thrive in spite of disruption and ever-changing consumer values
· Find and retain a workforce possessing both virtue and talent (the first being the more important)
· Award employees with ownership and decision rights based on their comparative advantages and proven contributions, rather than job title
· Motivate all employees to maximise their contributions with effectively structured incentives so employees' compensation is limited only by the value they create - not budgets or company-wide policy
A must-read for any leader, entrepreneur or student, as well as those who want a more civil, fair and prosperous society, GOOD PROFIT is destined to rank as one of the greatest management books of all time.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Koch (The Science of Success), chairman and CEO of Koch Industries, Inc., issues a rambling rah-rah for his company's operating philosophy. Koch took over from his father, Fred, at 32, and since has guided the company to great heights, in the process making himself the fourth wealthiest man in America. He attributes this success to Market-Based Management, a "unique business management framework," which has allowed Koch Industries to outpace competitors for decades. Koch discusses his relationship with his father and three brothers particularly David, his partner in Koch Industries and addresses areas in which he think the company succeeds despite what he views as an unacceptable level of government interference in business. Peppered with buzzwords and high-minded statements about the importance of hard work, intuition, and innovation, this effort comes across as a book-length advertisement for Koch Industries' products, and for himself as a businessman. A few cursory case studies round out the offering, but all but the most devout fans of the Koch brand are likely to find this too self-congratulatory and slim.