Ever since his first book was published some six
decades ago, Peter Drucker has been essential to everyone serious about the
"management of an enterprise (and) the self-management of the individual,
whether executive or professional, within an enterprise and altogether in our
society of managed organizations." This distinguished 30-year
Reaching back as far as 1954 with his treatise "Management by
Objectives and Self-Control" ("Each manager, from the 'big boss' down
to the production foreman or the chief clerk, needs clearly spelled-out
objectives" that clarify expected contributions "to the attainment of
company goals in all areas of the business"), Drucker's now-established
ideas take on a surprising new relevancy when remixed equally pioneering ideas
from the 1960s, '70s, '80s, and '90s. Between the thoughtful "Management
as Social and Liberal Art" through the provocative "From Analysis to
Perception--The New Worldview" (both originally published in 1988's The
New Realities), this book revisits some of modern management's most
inspired writing and presents it in a way that should appeal to both newcomers
and those needing a refresher course on Drucker's basic beliefs.
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