An edition of The witch doctors (1996)

The witch doctors

making sense of the management gurus

1st U.S. ed.
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April 14, 2012 | History
An edition of The witch doctors (1996)

The witch doctors

making sense of the management gurus

1st U.S. ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Management gurus - high-powered consulting firms, business school professors, motivational speakers who never graduated from high school - are latterday witch doctors, each promising the cure for what ails corporate America. These men and women are the sales reps for an industry that exists exclusively to peddle freshly laid management advice to petrified executives.

According to one recent study, 72 percent of managers believe that the right management tools can help ensure business success, even though 70 percent also say most of the tools promise more than they deliver. Often, the results are thousands of people losing their jobs or having their work lives irrevocably altered. But thousands of companies continue to grasp at the newest concept du jour - until the next sure thing comes along.

  1. The irony is that some of the gurus' ideas and prescriptions really can rescue or renovate your company. But until you have read The Witch Doctors, your chances of figuring out which ideas belong in your hot file and which in your circular file are slim indeed.

Micklethwait and Wooldridge have organized The Witch Doctors around the management problems that plague today's corporations. They examine the promise and the problems of reengineering, and analyze what - and who - is driving the current boom in the management industry. The authors profile Peter Drucker and Tom Peters, helping you decide what the uber-gurus can teach you and what they can't.

They proceed to look deeply into the social and corporate implications of every major conundrum managers and workers face today. Through unbiased, often contrarian investigations of knowledge, learning, and innovation, strategy and vision, the future of the workplace, shareholder versus stakeholder capitalism, globalization, and Japanese management, Micklethwait and Wooldridge tell you what works, what fails, and what the future may hold for those who act and those who wait.

Two groundbreaking chapters examine the inroads management theory is making in the public sector, and the unexpected paths Asian managers are blazing through the world economy.

Publish Date
Publisher
Times Books
Language
English
Pages
369

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The witch doctors
The witch doctors: making sense of the management gurus
1997, Times Business
in English - 1st U.S. ed.
Cover of: The witch doctors
The witch doctors: making sense of the management gurus
1996, Times Books
- 1st U.S. ed.
Cover of: Witch Doctors
Witch Doctors
1996, Farshore
in English
Cover of: The witch doctors
The witch doctors: making sense of the management gurus
1996, Times Books
in English - 1st U.S. ed.
Cover of: The witch doctors

Add another edition?

Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 329-345) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
658
Library of Congress
HD31 .M432 1996

The Physical Object

Pagination
xiv, 369 p. ;
Number of pages
369

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL970099M
Internet Archive
witchdoctorsmak000mick
ISBN 10
0812928334
LCCN
96006793
Library Thing
195619
Goodreads
1296284

Source records

Internet Archive item record

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History

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April 14, 2012 Edited by ImportBot import new book
October 25, 2011 Edited by ImportBot import new book
July 30, 2010 Edited by IdentifierBot added LibraryThing ID
April 15, 2010 Edited by bgimpertBot Added goodreads ID.
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record