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The Rise and Fall of Great Companies Geoffrey Owen (Senior Fellow, Department of Management, London School of Economics)

The Rise and Fall of Great Companies By Geoffrey Owen (Senior Fellow, Department of Management, London School of Economics)

Summary

This is the dramatic story of the rise and fall of a great British company, Courtaulds. It describes the upheavals that a company goes through when one of its core businesses is threatened with extinction in the face of globalization, and assesses why some companies found a way through the crisis and continue to exist, while Courtaulds did not.

The Rise and Fall of Great Companies Summary

The Rise and Fall of Great Companies: Courtaulds and the Reshaping of the Man-Made Fibres Industry by Geoffrey Owen (Senior Fellow, Department of Management, London School of Economics)

This book is about a company which pioneered a major new industry, failed to build on that success, and ended up being taken over and broken up. By comparing this firm with its competitors in the same industry, the book sheds light on one of the hardest of all managerial challenges: what companies can do when their industry goes through a period of turbulence, forcing them to change direction, learn new skills, and perhaps abandon businesses on which they have relied for many years. Courtaulds was a British company which was once the world's leading producer of man-made fibres. It failed to adapt to the crisis in that industry that began in the mid-1970s, and lost ground to the point where, 25 years later, it could no longer sustain itself as an independent company. The crisis stemmed from the shift of textiles, clothing, and man-fibre production to low-wage countries, and above all to China. The book looks in some detail at the other companies - European, American, and Japanese - which had a big commitment to man-made fibres in the earlier post-war decades and, like Courtaulds, faced difficult adjustment problems in the closing years of the 20th century. Why did some of them handle the crisis better than Courtaulds? In answering this question the book looks both at decisions taken by individual managers and at the national context in which they were operating. Institutional differences between countries, notably in the role of shareholders and the financial markets, played an important role in determining which companies survived and which did not.

The Rise and Fall of Great Companies Reviews

[An] impressively researched and lucidly written study...timely * David Kynaston, Financial Times *
Well written and judicious...deeply absorbing. * Martin Vander Weyer, Mail on Sunday *
This book will appeal to business historians wishing to understand how strategic management can inform our understanding of the very recent history of the man-made fibres industry, and those scholars in strategic management who are sceptical of the relevance of business history. * David Higgins, Business History *
Owens study is impressively researched and clearly written.This book deserves a wide readership. Not only would it be of interest to textile and business historians, but the lucid analysis makes it accessible to anyone interested in how business works. * Janet Greenlees, English Historical Review *
Geoffrey Owen's book on the demise of the Courtaulds company is one of the finest studies I know of a company grappling with a changing industry landscape. It has much to teach us of how the world works, and I cannot think of a better antidote to offer students whose textbooks discuss business strategy in overly simplified settings. * Professor John Sutton, London School of Economics *
a book that the Pasold Research Fund ought to be proud to publish as the seventeenth in its highly authoritative series of studies in textile history. * Economic History Review *
In this volume theory, empiricism, and compelling refl ections on the big picture work together in a way that will make this book rewarding not merely for textile historians but for anyone interested in modern, global, business history. Products, market structures, personalities, business cultures and technologies are all examined with impressive assurance. The book is, moreover, extremely well organised and its many sub-headings within chapters facilitate navigation. There are also some fi ne illustrations and helpful glossaries of product and processes. All in all, this is a most important contribution to contemporary business history and an outstanding addition to the Pasold Studies in Textile History. * Philip Ollerenshaw, Textile History *

About Geoffrey Owen (Senior Fellow, Department of Management, London School of Economics)

Sir Geoffrey Owen is a former editor of the Financial Times who is now a Senior Fellow at the Department of Management, London School of Economics. He was deputy editor of the Financial Times from 1973 to 1980 and editor from 1981 to 1990. He was knighted in 1989.

Table of Contents

COURTAULDS AND ITS COMPETITORS 1904-2008; AFTER THE BREAK-UP; THE WORLD MAN-MADE FIBRES INDUSTRY; CONCLUSION; APPENDICES

Additional information

GOR002885040
9780199592890
0199592896
The Rise and Fall of Great Companies: Courtaulds and the Reshaping of the Man-Made Fibres Industry by Geoffrey Owen (Senior Fellow, Department of Management, London School of Economics)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Oxford University Press
20100909
320
Winner of Winner of the BAC Wadsworth Prize 2011.
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Rise and Fall of Great Companies