The Halo Effect (Hardcover)

Author: Phil Rosenzweig
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780743291255
Publisher: Free Press
Publish Date: 2/6/2007
Buy.com Sku: 203093672
Item#: R9TEVY
Dimensions (in Inches) 8.5H x 6L x 1T
Pages: 256
 
Controversial and iconoclastic, a veteran corporate manager and business school professor exposes the dangerous myths, fantasies, and delusions that pervade much of the business world today.
 
Annotation:
After more than two decades in the business world, Phil Rosenzweig has seen and heard a lot--some of it useful, yet much of it false. In the HALO EFFECT, Rosenzweig sets out to debunk what he sees as commonly held delusions about leadership, productivity, and the reasons why companies succeed or fail. In an engaging and entertaining manner, he points out flaws in logic and confusions over things such as cause and effect. The title refers to the tendency to lavish easy praise on seemingly successful companies, while glossing over the bad. He is also skeptical of the many books by business gurus, seeing them as simplistic. Rosenzweig provides insightful examples of companies with both good and bad practices, as he argues that business can be more scientific and skeptical, replacing rhetoric with rigor.

 

Praise
"That a management book can be at once scientific and a palatable read is a credit to Rosenzweig's writing style and clear thinking....The business community will find plenty of revealing and provocative fodder." - Michelle Archer 02/19/2007


 
 
Read A Chapter
Chapter One: How Little We Know

How little we know, how much to discover...

Who cares to define what chemistry this is?

Who cares, with your lips on mine, how ignorant bliss is?

"How Little We Know (How Little It Matters)"

Words by Carolyn Leigh, music by Philip Springer, 1956

In January 2004, after a particularly disastrous holiday season, Lego, the Danish toy company, fired its chief operating officer. No one doubted that Poul Plougmann had to go. Miserable Christmas sales were the last straw at the end of a terrible year -- Lego's revenues were down by 25 percent, and the company lost $230 million for the year, the worst in its history. What went so badly wrong? Chief executive Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, grandson of the founder, explained it simply: Lego had "strayed too far from its roots and relied too heavily on merchandising spin-offs, such as Harry Potter figures, which proved unpopular this season despite the continuin

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