Morgen Witzel's new text covers millennia of distilled management wisdom. The author has an almost-encyclopedic knowledge of the field. The book is both highly readable and informative and truly brings the topic to life. It should thus have a wide appeal to students, lecturers and practitioners. -- Malcolm Warner * Professor and Fellow Emeritus, Wolfson College and Judge Business School, University of Cambridge *
A rip-roaring history of managerial, philosophical and scientific thought that captures twenty enduring principles of human and organisational behaviour. Few other authors could cover so broad and complex a range of ideas in such a straightforward and engaging manner. -- Richard Bolden * Professor of Leadership and Management, University of the West of England, UK *
This entertaining book offers time tested wisdom and provides insights that will be instantly useful to anyone involved in business. -- Peter L. Howell * Managing Director, Rabobank International *
Morgen Witzel, one of the world's leading management historians has done it again. He has written another outstanding book that is a pleasure to read and at the same time makes us think deeply about important management principles that are historical yet entirely relevant for our challenging global economy. -- Karl Moore * Associate Professor, McGill University *
Did you know that the law of entropy as applied to business derives from the second law of thermodynamics? Or that Arthashastra, Kautilya's classic work on politics and leadership, was written in India over 2,300 years ago? Or that the 'concept of the span of control was first formally identified by the Lithuanian engineer V.A. Graicunas in the early 1930s'? These and many other fascinating references, all still highly relevant to contemporary - and doubtless to future - business practices, are peppered throughout Morgen Witzel's delightful and thought-provoking volume of cautionary notes. They are culled and interpreted from sages across the globe and centuries, and concern the art and practice of managing. -- Bob MacKenzie * Organizations and People magazine *