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In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-run Companies [Paperback]

Tom Peters , Robert H. Waterman
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins; (Reissue) edition (20 Feb 1995)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0006384021
  • ISBN-13: 978-0006384021
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 13 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 660,750 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

'One of those rare books on management that is both consistently thought-provoking and fun to read.' Wall Street Journal 'A landmark book, without question the most important and useful book on what makes organisations effective, ever written' Warren Buffet 'Required reading.' International Management Magazine --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

'One of those rare books on management.' Wall Street Journal'Required reading.' International Management Magazine'The bestseller that is wowing them in American boardrooms. 'The Economist'Receiving serious attention in business schools and corporate boardrooms.' Washington Post --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
IN SEARCH OF EXCELLENCE lays much of the groundwork for anyone interested in studying management. Tom Peters presents most of the concepts which have become almost by-laws of organizatonal behavior and managerial theory, and on which most of his subsequent work is based e.g. success through failure, innovation through entrepreneurship, management by walk about, customer and employee orientation. The best part of the book are the numerous fascinating anecdotes which Mr. Peters relates from his research into the practises of legendary companies and their leaders. At times, the book might seem outdated in its applicability to the current organizational structure, but it remains a seminal work in management excellence theory, and is a book for the ages.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Excellence revisited 19 July 2005
By Niklas Kari VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
In Search of Excellence has been credited to have started the so-called management guru business. Written in 1982 it is the first book that aims to explain company success in a popularized way. Subsequent books on the subject are, for instance, Competitive Advantage (Porter, 1985) and, more recently, Good to Great (Collins, 2001). I gave the book three stars, but in that assessment I have tried to consider that the book is old and business knowledge has evolved ever since - yet the book is a seminal piece of work. If the book would have been written more recently, it probably would have given one or two stars to it.

Based on a major McKinsey study, In Search of Excellence identifies eight characteristics common for excellent companies: (1) a bias for action, (2) close to the customer, (3) autonomy and entrepreneurship, (4) productivity through people, (5) hands-on, value-driven, (6) stick to the knitting, (7) simple form, lean staff, and (8) simultaneous loose-tight properties. Personally, I don't find this set of characteristics very surprising or insightful - it would be difficult to imagine a financially excellently performing company that doesn't get things done, doesn't care about customers, is excessively bureaucratic and so forth. Moreover, some of these characteristics are at most directionally true such as "stick to the knitting" (consider e.g. GE - which btw. was part of the book's sample).

Nevertheless, In Search of Excellence provides interesting examples and a lot of good practical advice. I have to admit, though, that for me many of the examples were tedious reading as they represented often quite outdated issues. What I liked most in the book was the theory. Peters and Waterman have succeeded in picking up theory that mostly has stand the test of time. I would assume that for instance Henry Mintzberg and Karl Weick were much less known in 1982 as they are today. James March, Alfred Chandler and many others still are considered great management thinkers. My fancying for the theory is partly explained by that I in general agree with the author's that it is more often the soft issues that are important, not the hard issues.

The methodology used in the study is not particularly robust. An original convenience sample of 62 companies is analyzed on six different measures of financial excellence such as average return on equity between 1961 and 1980. In order to be "excellent", a company must be in the top half within its industry in four of the six measures. 43 companies met this criterion and the authors conducted interviews in them. Underperforming companies were not really included so the study doesn't tell are the identified characteristics unique to excellent companies (although the authors make a vague statement that underperforming companies were also analyzed, but they didn't focus on them). Also, for unclear reasons, companies that were perceived excellent but were not part of the initial sample, were included in the book's example, which is a little confusing (are those companies also excellent, and if yes, on what basis?).

Finally, a point I find very intriguing, is that in an article for FastCompany in 2001 (http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/53/peters.html), Peters admitted that he and Waterman faked the data. This raises some interesting ethical questions: why does the new foreword of In Search of Excellence (written in 2003) not raise the issue? Why does McKinsey still embrace the book on its web page without mentioning that the data has been cooked? To me it seems to imply that an aspiration for truth is easily put aside in order to serve self-interested purposes.

So what is the "so what" of In Search of Excellence? Considering that the methodology is as weak as it is, it's hard to draw any far-fetched conclusions from the study. Neither does the book try to do that - it rather states that excellent companies seems to have these characteristics in common, and if you focus on them, maybe also your company will be excellent. Now considering that the data was cooked, the book doesn't really say even that, but rather provides a seemingly good narrative and dwells on some interesting ideas, while at the same time being short on intellectual rigor and ethics.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Life (and business) are a lot more fun if we are excited and committed to what we are doing. This book reawakens our sense that organizations can be exciting and meaningful places to be, filled with the potential for great results and enormous impact. We all have been touched by an outstanding leader and inspired to do more. Most of us would have a hard time spelling out what those leaders do. This book is a very practical guide to being a good example and a source of daily inspiration. You can read other books to figure out what to inspire people to do specifically and so forth, but this one is unique. You may find that you do not "get" a particular recommendation. To deepen your understanding, I recommend that you read A PASSION FOR EXCELLENCE in those areas where you are unmoved or unclear. It is filled with examples on the same points as IN SEARCH OF EXCELLENCE. I also like the title. Finding excellence is a never-ending task for us all. If you want to read a terrific book on how successful companies differ from their less successful competitors, be sure to read BUILT TO LAST. It is also a great companion for IN SEARCH OF EXCELLENCE.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
a!
fascinating and to the point. a must read. loads of stories and examples to drive home the message. recommend to anyone interested in management
Published 4 months ago by rebbe
Fascinating account but slightly outdated
This is a fascinating account of the state of US' business in the early 1980s. It is slightly outdated but includes some interesting concepts. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Melvin
In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-run Companies
IN SEARCH OF EXCELLENCE - Lessons from America's Best-run Companies which challenges "rationalism" but did not reject orthodox model was written by two eminently qualified... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Iyke Ozemena
Small was beautiful in 1982, and it still is today!
I learnt a lot from this book, particularly about the age-old discussion of centralisation vs decentralisation, and I think it's as least as relevant now as it was in 1982, if not... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Maarten de Vries
A Bit Outdated but Still Sound on The Theory
I took an interest in organisational leadership when I changed jobs about two years ago. I started pondering the question, Why is one company `better' at bringing out the best in... Read more
Published on 20 Sep 2009 by A. O. P. Akemu
Classic work on striving for corporate excellence
This book presents the results of a research project that authors Tom Peters and Robert Waterman conducted from 1979 to 1980. Read more
Published on 11 July 2008 by Rolf Dobelli
Give them credit for getting the ball rolling  thats it!
This book was, for a significant period, regarded as the classic in its field, which is why it made gradual entrance in the business-books limelight rather than being an... Read more
Published on 14 Aug 2005 by Fraser
Use Positive Emotions for Positive Results
Life (and business) are a lot more fun if we are excited by and committed to what we are doing. This book reawakens our sense that organizations can be exciting and meaningful... Read more
Published on 28 May 2004 by Donald Mitchell
Use Positive Emotions for Positive Results
Life (and business) are a lot more fun if we are excited by and committed to what we are doing. This book reawakens our sense that organizations can be exciting and meaningful... Read more
Published on 28 May 2004 by Donald Mitchell
A little too 1980'ish......
Great in its day but a little dated now - Don't get me wrong, I still enjoy wearing multi-coloured parallel pant's and platform shoes but don't think some of the lessons in this... Read more
Published on 14 April 2004 by Jack Feeney-Author / Analyst
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