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Book Cover
Book
Author Hoopes, James, 1944-

Title False prophets : the gurus who created modern management and why their ideas are bad for business today / James Hoopes
Published Cambridge, MA ; [Oxford] : Perseus, 2003

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 WATERFT BUSINESS  658.00922 Hoo/Fpt  AVAILABLE
 MELB  658.00922 Hoo/Fpt  AVAILABLE
 W'BOOL  658.00922 Hoo/Fpt  AVAILABLE
Description xxxii, 320 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Summary "In this critical history of American management, business historian James Hoopes offers modern managers a more realistic perspective. He reminds us that the corporations' ability to create wealth depends on managerial authority, so top-down power and its potential abuse are here to stay in corporate America." "The origins of today's misguided management practices are rooted in the influential theories of the early twentieth century gurus, who aimed to temper management's authoritarian power with democratic principles. False Prophets vividly tells the story of these colorful and flawed characters in the context of the ever-changing American political and cultural climate. It introduces us to: Frederick W. Taylor, the first management guru and the father of scientific management who ruthlessly sped up workers by timing their every motion; Mary Parker Follett, the forgotten pioneer whose ideas on "followship" remain vitally useful in corporate life; Elton Mayo, the Australian immigrant whose intellectual chicanery on the subject of human relations put the Harvard Business School on the map; W. Edwards Deming, who brought quality management to America via a detour through Japan; and Peter Drucker, who left Germany in protest of Hitler's tyranny and tried bravely but unsuccessfully to make power morally legitimate in American corporations." "This penetrating and fascinating book critically examines the gurus' ideas and traces their evolution to modern business applications. Hoopes challenges the popular movements that followed as a result and sharply criticizes today's gurus for continuing to perpetuate bad management in the name of democratic values. In the process, he shows executives and managers how to recognize fad from fact and gives them new guidelines for using authority effectively and responsibly."--Book jacket
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-310) and index
Notes Also available online via the World Wide Web by subscription to netLibrary, Inc. (CEIRC Shared Collection)
Subject Industrial management -- United States -- History.
Executive ability -- United States -- History.
Executives -- United States -- History.
Leadership -- United States -- History.
Corporate culture -- United States -- History.
Organizational behavior -- United States -- History.
LC no. 2003101363
ISBN 0738207985 :