In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-Run Companies
In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-Run Companies book cover

In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-Run Companies

Paperback – February 7, 2006

Price
$10.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
400
Publisher
Harper Business
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0060548780
Dimensions
5.25 x 1 x 7.75 inches
Weight
10.5 ounces

Description

“One of those rare books on management that are both consistently thought-provoking and fun to read.” — Wall Street Journal Thomas J. Peters, "uber-guru of business" ( Fortune and The Economist ), is the author of many international bestsellers, including A Passion for Excellence and Thriving on Chaos . Peters, "the father of the post-modern corporation" ( Los Angeles Times ), is the chairman of Tom Peters Company and lives in Vermont. Robert H. Waterman, Jr. is the bestselling author of The Renewal Factor , Adhocracy , and What America Does Right , and the director of The Waterman Group, Inc. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. In Search of Excellence By Peters, Thomas J. HarperBusiness ISBN: 0060548789 Author's Note As we look back on the two decades since the publication of Excellence , our main feeling is delight. Delight that so many people embraced the book. Delight in that we think we mainly got it right. Our main detractors point to the decline of some of the companies we featured. They miss the point, which was to learn from those who'd had a long run of success, just as we learn from athletes in their prime. We weren't writing Forever Excellent , just as it would be absurd to expect any great athlete not to age. (The sheer longevity of Procter & Gamble'ssuccess is, however, intriguing.) And to the most hardheaded of our critics on this dimension: had you bought an "excellence index" when we published and held it through 2002, your total return would have been 1,300 percent, compared to around 800 percent for the Dow and 600 percent for the S&P 500. What we take most pleasure in is sticking to our guns in putting several theory chapters up front: "The Rational Model," "Man Waiting for Motivation," and "Managing Ambiguity and Paradox." We told the readers they could skip these. Now we don't think so. They should be read and are just as relevant today as when we originally published. In brief, we were saying the following (but don't skip the chapters). First, people and organizations are not "rational" in the ways strategy, business, and organization are typically taught. It's dangerous to try to force a simplistic and misguided rationality on the way we manage. You cannot just manage "by the numbers." Don't even think about it. Second, most of the management systems that treat people as "factors of production," as cogs in an industrial machine, are inherently demotivating. People are wonderfully different and complex. Leaders need to set people free to help, not try to harness them. Third, the world is a confusing place, full of ambiguity. The hardest thing to manage is the "soft stuff," especially culture. Yet without serious attention to the so-called soft stuff, leaders will fail. Nor would we change our eight attributes of excellence, though we're perfectly aware that another researcher, looking at the same data, might pick a different set. These eight pretty clearly describe what's different about the top performers: A bias for action . In its simplest terms, this says "get out there and try something." Just as you don't learn anything in science without experimenting, you don't learn anything in business without trying, failing, and trying again. The trick, and it's a tough one, is a common cultural understanding of what kind of failure is okay and what kind leads to disaster. But don't kid yourself. No amount of analysis, especially market research, will lead to true innovation. Close to the customer . This may be the hardest to accomplish and perhaps where our sample of excellent companies -- IBM, Hewlett-Packard, K Mart, and even McDonald's -- got off the track. It's hard. There's so much to pay attention to inside an organization that has time to understand customers, especially when the set of customers includes distributors and wonderfully irrational end users. Yet Procter's skill at keeping everyone in the organization in close touch with customers, combined with a formidable innovative capability, may explain that company's incredibly long history of success. Autonomy and entrepreneurship . Even if you're big, act small. Organizations are simply collections of people, and people don't relate well to big, abstract entities. If you want to understand the success of Johnson & Johnson, 3M, Wal-Mart, and the original HP, look to the fact that they organize themselves into small, relatively independent units, held together by common goals and cultural norms. Productivity through people . As the youngsters say, "Duh!" What else counts in an organization except people? Everyone gives lip service to the importance of their people, yet only a few really treat them as other than cannon fodder. One of the best examples we've ever seen was Delta Airlines with its "family feeling," which was so special that in 1982 employees banded together to spend a total of $30 million in payroll deductions to give their employer its first Boeing 767, the Spiritof Delta. Sadly, Delta lost that family feeling, maybe when it merged with Western Airlines. Hands-on, value-driven . The idea is simple. Figure out what your company should stand for, what would give your people the most pride. Then actively manage toward that value system. Remember that profit is to business as breathing is to life. The top companies make meaning, not just money. Stick to the knitting . Except for one or two notable exceptions, for example, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway and Jack Welch's GE, business diversity almost never works. Be particularly leery of the word synergy, which sounds great -- who doesn't want 1 + 1 to equal 3? Well, our observation then and now is that big mergers rarely work. Further, nothing screws up a successful business more than hyperfast growth. Simple form, lean staff . Though organizations are inherently quite complicated, one ought not make them more so via complex organizational arrangements. Install a simple and workable structure; people will figure out the rest. Keep staff to a minimum, outsource a lot of staff activities, or use time-limited, project-oriented task forces (another form of the line organization). Big staffs, and most career staff people, always seem to get in the way of the folks in organizations who get thereal work done. Simultaneous loose-tight properties . Sorry about this chapter heading, but it does say what we mean. Any well-functioning organization is neither centralized nor decentralized but a wonderful combination of both. Around most dimensions the best companies, then and now, are loose. They give people exceptional freedom to do things their ownway. At the same time, the great companies are highly centralized around a few crucial dimensions: the central values that make up their culture, one or two (no more) top strategic priorities, and a few key financial indicators. Those are our eight attributes, then and now. Both of us have done a great deal of writing since Excellence , and we've expressed what we've seen in different terms. But we've never done better than in this book. The attributes are just that: attributes, not principles. But until something clearly better comes along, we'll stick with these. -- Tom PetersBob WatermanNovember 2003 Continues... Excerpted from In Search of Excellence by Peters, Thomas J. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The "Greatest Business Book of All Time" (Bloomsbury UK),
  • In Search of Excellence
  • has long been a must-have for the boardroom, business school, and bedside table.
  • Based on a study of forty-three of America's best-run companies from a diverse array of business sectors,
  • In Search of Excellence
  • describes eight basic principles of management -- action-stimulating, people-oriented, profit-maximizing practices -- that made these organizations successful.
  • Joining the HarperBusiness Essentials series, this phenomenal bestseller features a new Authors' Note, and reintroduces these vital principles in an accessible and practical way for today's management reader.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(404)
★★★★
25%
(168)
★★★
15%
(101)
★★
7%
(47)
-7%
(-47)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Some great management insights and observations

For any who delights and is confounded by the structure and functions (or lack of) of large organizations this book is a delightful read, the first two thirds of it anyway. The authors have done extensive research to come up with their eight points that according to them are indicative of an organization's long term success and health (some of them sound repetitive and start to tire toward the end).

It is interesting to note that many of the great companies of the time of the first publication for this book in the mid eighties - HP, IBM, Digital, TI, etc - are either struggling to remain relevant or are not to be found anywhere anymore. This is not to say that the recommendations in the book are not meaningful but it does point out the complexity and the unpredictability of the world in which organizations operate. It does, however, is indicative of the book's failure at noting and addressing the requisites for sustaining a culture of excellence through the market demands, changing leadership, large expanse of time, and disappearing founders, which often leads to value corrosion - the root of all cultural sickness.

One of the most critical aspects of good leadership is the passing of the baton, developing other leaders who can take the torch forward while deeply understanding and upholding the values on which an organization succeeds. Both HP and IBM have severely suffered since the loss of their founding fathers. In spite of having good leaders come and go they no longer carry the glean with which they once used to shine.

One other area where I found this work lacking was that it never touched upon in detail on what it considers as "excellence". One could construe from the writings that to the authors excellence is about a work culture where people naturally feel empowered and motivated, organization's output is innovative and ever fresh, and financial results are strong. To me these are results of excellence but not excellence itself.

I have often asked myself about excellence, it's presence and its absence, and how do we know when we are in presence of excellence and how to tell when we are witness to sloppiness. Excellence shines of its own accord. It is hard to put a definition around excellence. It is almost a spiritual quality, which is hard to confine in a definition but easier to express in what it is not or how it expresses itself. To me excellence is beauty, it is the bringer of delight, desirable yet unexpected, it exudes a pride of craftsmanship, it is skill in action, it is the WoW! factor, it makes the ordinary seem extraordinary, it is love, passion, pride, quality, and competence manifested. Excellence above all is an expression of genuine care.
49 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The search continues

I read this book again after a gap of nearly 20 years. The world has significantly changed since then and so have the fortunes of many of the "excellent" companies listed in this book. Some have continued to excel, some have made a comeback after facing tough times and some have ceased to exist. Excellence is neither permanent nor an assurance for "lived happily thereafter" ending for a corporate fable. As often mentioned in most management books, the only thing that is permanent is change, and change has been rapid and unforgiving in the last two decades. In this context, is this one time business bestseller flawed in its study and its findings ?. The authors themselves answer this question in their opening remarks - "Authors' Note: Excellence 2003" in this new paperback edition.
Theory first. There is a solid attack on the Rational Model ( over emphasis on quantitative approaches to management ) in American business schools which the authors feel is a main cause for the decline of American companies in the third quarter of the twentieth century. The understanding of the human side and aligning people with the Organization's goals through a deep sense of respect and involvement is at the core of success at the excellent companies is the next hypothesis. In their search for excellence, the research leads to eight prominent attributes that are common across the best run companies. All these attributes have direct and significant link to this aspect of the human side of enterprise.
The excellent companies have focussed consciously and consistently on rigorously practicing several of the eight attributes. Failure to focus on these have led to setbacks in subsequent years. An outstanding athlete cannot be expected to win gold at all the Olympics in his lifetime. Athletes age and so do companies say the authors. But is there a prescription against aging for companies that are committed to excellence ?
This book is liable for criticism on the following counts :
- Too much of theory in the first four chapters, mostly borrowed from other earlier management gurus
- Descriptive and repetitive
- Data insufficiency for backing conclusions
- Sample does not cover all industries and restricted to American companies
- Talks of the past and ignores prescriptions for the future
- Attributes need to be ranked and revisited periodically and perhaps a new list might emerge
Several books have been written on this topic since this classic was first published in 1982. Many have addressed the points listed above. But this ground breaking book continues to be the pathfinder in all that has followed. Go back to the analogy of the athlete. A gold is a gold at any contest and this book deserves one for its own excellence.
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Fake

Author admitted to faking data. Most of the so called excellent companies ended up either poor or average performers over the following years. Read "The Halo Effect" instead.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Classic

Timeless book on creating a great business.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Still a classic.

One of the best business books ever written.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A must read for business managers in the 21st century

it was a really well written and informative book. i enjoyed it, especially now. A lot of the ideas that GE under both Jones & Welch used were exactly the same as the founders of the United States Constitution put in the Articles. John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, JFK and Trump are very close together on how to market their ideas. The book explained GE's process set by step. Have big over all ideas, and allow the change to set the actions. Every action only last until a change, then it must be replaced or restructured. If all our lawmakers understood this we wouldn't have 2,000 pages of how to do something thar changes in 12 months due to improvements or complete new products and services.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

Great
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Useful information.

Wonderful book.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A historical perspective of the study of management

I had a hard time finishing this book, tried it at least three times. It wasn't the knowledge that the authors' admission of falsifying data in support of their findings. After reading some of the online commentaries and authors' interviews, I accepted the advice given in the book are still valid. In my last attempt I managed to finish 80% of the book and skimmed the rest. It could just be the age of the book. I mean, concepts such as "close to customer", "empower employee", "simple management layers"... and you get the sense that "OK, what's new here ?" These are all very good advice. Ask 100 CEOs and 101 would response with the same platitude. I guess I just don't believe these are the deciding factors to become Excellence. It is still a good read as a historical study of the science of management.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

It remains a classic

I gave this book to a mentee in the business school to make a point that a focus on the customer remains a primary focus in companies that do well. Peters and Waterman stressed this point four decades ago, and it still rings true.