Imagine, if you can, the world of business - without corporate strategy.
Remarkably, fifty years ago that's the way it was. Businesses made
plans, certainly, but without understanding the underlying dynamics of
competition, costs, and customers. It was like trying to design a
large-scale engineering project without knowing the laws of physics.
But in the 1960s, four mavericks and their posses instigated a profound
shift in thinking that turbocharged business as never before, with
implications far beyond what even they imagined. In The Lords of
Strategy, renowned business journalist and editor Walter Kiechel tells,
for the first time, the story of the four men who invented corporate
strategy as we know it and set in motion the modern, multibillion-dollar
consulting industry:
Bruce Henderson, founder of Boston Consulting Group
Bill Bain, creator of Bain & Company
Fred Gluck, longtime Managing Director of McKinsey & Company
Michael Porter, Harvard Business School professor
Providing a window into how to think about strategy today, Kiechel tells
their story with novelistic flair. At times inspiring, at times nearly
terrifying, this book is a revealing account of how these iconoclasts
and the organizations they led revolutionized the way we think about
business, changed the very soul of the corporation, and transformed the
way we work.