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- catalog abstract ""The 1950s was the era of the Black Phantom, the Schwinn Bicycle Company's classic balloon-tire bike with chrome fenders that gleamed when you opened the garage door. These were the years when the name Schwinn was synonymous with bicycle, and the Chicago-based family company manufactured one of every four bikes sold in America. Since its establishment in 1895, Schwinn knew the pulse of its market. Repeatedly reinventing its product to capture the consumer's imagination, the company sensed what Americans wanted and innovated first and fastest - bringing to life so many of the designs that shaped each generation's idea of what made a real bike: high-rise handlebars, handlebar streamers, balloon tires, and banana seats. In sales, too, Schwinn redefined the way the industry operated, building the smartest network of local dealerships in the business. But Schwinn grew complacent in its third and fourth generations of family management. Its executives and engineers snickered at the first mongrel mountain bike - pieced together with elements of the old Schwinn Excelsior - only to watch it become the most important bike trend of the 1980s and a challenge Schwinn would prove unable to meet. This is the unauthorized story of the corporate fall from grace of Schwinn, the very essence of Americana. With a backdrop of a century of rich cultural history, the authors follow this highly regarded American business to its ultimate descent into bankruptcy and takeover by an outsider. The book explores the pitfalls peculiar to family-owned companies, but it is also a cautionary tale of what can happen to American manufacturing as it is catapulted into the global arena and high technology of the twenty-first century."--Jacket.".
- catalog contributor b9940429.
- catalog contributor b9940430.
- catalog created "1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1996.".
- catalog description ""Everything is bicycle" -- A bust -- and a comeback -- The old man -- Dealer and überdealer -- Cool? And how -- Let the good times roll -- The hangover -- "Weird and freaky stuff" -- "Just being a kid" -- Trekking -- Ed takes charge -- One strike and you're out -- The difference O'Dea made -- Land of the Giant -- Schwinn meets central planning -- The China syndrome -- The other S -- Mississippi churning -- "An important guy" -- Downhill, fast -- A series of aggravations -- The grease for a deal -- The vulture swoops -- A final spin.".
- catalog description ""The 1950s was the era of the Black Phantom, the Schwinn Bicycle Company's classic balloon-tire bike with chrome fenders that gleamed when you opened the garage door. These were the years when the name Schwinn was synonymous with bicycle, and the Chicago-based family company manufactured one of every four bikes sold in America. Since its establishment in 1895, Schwinn knew the pulse of its market. Repeatedly reinventing its product to capture the consumer's imagination, the company sensed what Americans wanted and innovated first and fastest - bringing to life so many of the designs that shaped each generation's idea of what made a real bike: high-rise handlebars, handlebar streamers, balloon tires, and banana seats. In sales, too, Schwinn redefined the way the industry operated, building the smartest network of local dealerships in the business. But Schwinn grew complacent in its third and fourth generations of family management. Its executives and engineers snickered at the first mongrel mountain bike - pieced together with elements of the old Schwinn Excelsior - only to watch it become the most important bike trend of the 1980s and a challenge Schwinn would prove unable to meet. This is the unauthorized story of the corporate fall from grace of Schwinn, the very essence of Americana. With a backdrop of a century of rich cultural history, the authors follow this highly regarded American business to its ultimate descent into bankruptcy and takeover by an outsider. The book explores the pitfalls peculiar to family-owned companies, but it is also a cautionary tale of what can happen to American manufacturing as it is catapulted into the global arena and high technology of the twenty-first century."--Jacket.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 317-330) and index.".
- catalog extent "x, 350 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0805035532 (alk. paper)".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : H. Holt,".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "338.7/6292272/0973 20".
- catalog subject "Bicycle industry United States History.".
- catalog subject "HD9993.B544 S393 1996".
- catalog subject "Schwinn Bicycle Company History.".
- catalog tableOfContents ""Everything is bicycle" -- A bust -- and a comeback -- The old man -- Dealer and überdealer -- Cool? And how -- Let the good times roll -- The hangover -- "Weird and freaky stuff" -- "Just being a kid" -- Trekking -- Ed takes charge -- One strike and you're out -- The difference O'Dea made -- Land of the Giant -- Schwinn meets central planning -- The China syndrome -- The other S -- Mississippi churning -- "An important guy" -- Downhill, fast -- A series of aggravations -- The grease for a deal -- The vulture swoops -- A final spin.".
- catalog title "No hands : the rise and fall of the Schwinn Bicycle Company : an American institution / Judith Crown & Glenn Coleman.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".