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- catalog abstract "Behind the international reputation of such German companies as Daimler-Benz, BMW, Siemens, Bosch, and Krups are hundreds of highly successful mid-sized companies that build the components that make the cars, computers, and coffee makers the world wants to buy. These companies - the Mittelstand - account collectively for half of Germany's GNP and have created almost all that nation's new jobs in the past decade. Simplicity Wins is the product of a five-year examination of these mid-sized firms and a companion study of similar U.S. companies whose findings supported the German results. The top performers among the German group had growth rates four times higher, productivity 25 percent greater, and return on sales three times higher than those of their weakest competitors. What is the secret of their success? In a word, simplicity. These leading firms produce a narrower range of products, sell to fewer customers, and have fewer suppliers. They have decentralized organizational structures, simpler and faster processes, and a more concentrated focus of R & D investment, logistics, and location structure. Simplicity, according to the authors, is not an answer but a process. They describe how high-growth companies use simplicity to keep a "winning wheel" of superior performance turning. Rigorous implementation of simplicity leads to the achievement of clear strategic differentiation in value to the customer and operational excellence in cost, time, and quality. These in turn bring sustainable corporate success. As measured by a combination of market share, profit, growth, customer loyalty, financial strength, and image, such success enables future-oriented investment in new products, markets, and people. And the cycle repeats. Linking simplicity to high performance runs counter to the common corporate practice of creating internal complexity - developing multiple line extensions and integrating backward and forward, for example - to meet the increasingly complex demands of the marketplace. Nor is down-sizing the answer: the high-growth companies instead achieved simplicity through selectivity and concentration of resources. Most encouraging, the authors' findings affirm that there are no "bad" industries. That is, for any company anywhere in the world, which industry you compete in is far less important than how you compete.".
- catalog alternative "Einfach überlegen. English.".
- catalog contributor b7813080.
- catalog created "1995.".
- catalog date "1995".
- catalog date "1995.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1995.".
- catalog description "Behind the international reputation of such German companies as Daimler-Benz, BMW, Siemens, Bosch, and Krups are hundreds of highly successful mid-sized companies that build the components that make the cars, computers, and coffee makers the world wants to buy. These companies - the Mittelstand - account collectively for half of Germany's GNP and have created almost all that nation's new jobs in the past decade.".
- catalog description "Introduction: Excellent performance and simplicity -- Product range and customer structure: Concentrating on core areas and delivering optimum customer value -- Vertical integration: Expanding in-house strengths, integrating key suppliers -- Development: Minimizing risk with a strong upstream focus and an integrated approach -- Logistics: Simplicity through differentiation -- Technology: Simplification before automation -- Organization : Transparency and entrepreneurship -- From concept to program: Putting simplicity into practice -- Postscript: A U.S. comparison.".
- catalog description "Linking simplicity to high performance runs counter to the common corporate practice of creating internal complexity - developing multiple line extensions and integrating backward and forward, for example - to meet the increasingly complex demands of the marketplace. Nor is down-sizing the answer: the high-growth companies instead achieved simplicity through selectivity and concentration of resources. Most encouraging, the authors' findings affirm that there are no "bad" industries. That is, for any company anywhere in the world, which industry you compete in is far less important than how you compete.".
- catalog description "Simplicity Wins is the product of a five-year examination of these mid-sized firms and a companion study of similar U.S. companies whose findings supported the German results. The top performers among the German group had growth rates four times higher, productivity 25 percent greater, and return on sales three times higher than those of their weakest competitors. What is the secret of their success? In a word, simplicity. These leading firms produce a narrower range of products, sell to fewer customers, and have fewer suppliers. They have decentralized organizational structures, simpler and faster processes, and a more concentrated focus of R & D investment, logistics, and location structure.".
- catalog description "Simplicity, according to the authors, is not an answer but a process. They describe how high-growth companies use simplicity to keep a "winning wheel" of superior performance turning. Rigorous implementation of simplicity leads to the achievement of clear strategic differentiation in value to the customer and operational excellence in cost, time, and quality. These in turn bring sustainable corporate success. As measured by a combination of market share, profit, growth, customer loyalty, financial strength, and image, such success enables future-oriented investment in new products, markets, and people. And the cycle repeats.".
- catalog description "Soundview Best Book List".
- catalog extent "xiii, 214 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0875845045 :".
- catalog issued "1995".
- catalog issued "1995.".
- catalog language "eng ger".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Boston, Mass. : Harvard Business School Press,".
- catalog spatial "Germany".
- catalog spatial "Germany.".
- catalog subject "658.02/2/0943 20".
- catalog subject "HD62.7 .E3913 1995".
- catalog subject "Management Germany.".
- catalog subject "Organizational effectiveness.".
- catalog subject "Small business Germany Management.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: Excellent performance and simplicity -- Product range and customer structure: Concentrating on core areas and delivering optimum customer value -- Vertical integration: Expanding in-house strengths, integrating key suppliers -- Development: Minimizing risk with a strong upstream focus and an integrated approach -- Logistics: Simplicity through differentiation -- Technology: Simplification before automation -- Organization : Transparency and entrepreneurship -- From concept to program: Putting simplicity into practice -- Postscript: A U.S. comparison.".
- catalog title "Simplicity wins : how Germany's mid-sized industrial companies succeed / Günter Rommel ... [et al.].".
- catalog type "text".