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- catalog abstract "Theodore Levitt was one of the first scholars to write a high-impact article on globalization aimed at business managers. Now, two decades later, "The Globalization of Markets" is still widely read. Rather than agreeing with Levitt, however, most observers today believe that his arguments were flawed and his predictions have not been borne out. To be sure, we agree that not all of Levitt's predictions came true. Nevertheless, his article does offer enduring insights, and those are what we want to explore. Understanding Levitt's "globalization" as an analytical lens through which to view the world is highly useful. Indeed, Levitt's central insight - that "preferences are constantly shaped and reshaped" - is crucial for both managers and scholars. What constitutes globalization, in Levitt's (and, therefore, our) way of thinking, is interaction that changes things, rather than leaving them the same. Successful firms, and the managers who run them, rarely leave the world as they found it. Rather than taking consumer preferences as given, as facts of life and markets, managers have treated them as outcomes themselves, with profound effects. Following Levitt, then, we can see that the global market is not what firms find; the market is what firms make of it.".
- catalog contributor b12963115.
- catalog contributor b12963116.
- catalog contributor b12963117.
- catalog created "c2003.".
- catalog date "2003".
- catalog date "c2003.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c2003.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "Theodore Levitt was one of the first scholars to write a high-impact article on globalization aimed at business managers. Now, two decades later, "The Globalization of Markets" is still widely read. Rather than agreeing with Levitt, however, most observers today believe that his arguments were flawed and his predictions have not been borne out. To be sure, we agree that not all of Levitt's predictions came true. Nevertheless, his article does offer enduring insights, and those are what we want to explore. Understanding Levitt's "globalization" as an analytical lens through which to view the world is highly useful. Indeed, Levitt's central insight - that "preferences are constantly shaped and reshaped" - is crucial for both managers and scholars. What constitutes globalization, in Levitt's (and, therefore, our) way of thinking, is interaction that changes things, rather than leaving them the same. Successful firms, and the managers who run them, rarely leave the world as they found it. Rather than taking consumer preferences as given, as facts of life and markets, managers have treated them as outcomes themselves, with profound effects. Following Levitt, then, we can see that the global market is not what firms find; the market is what firms make of it.".
- catalog extent "29 p. ;".
- catalog isPartOf "Working paper (Harvard Business School. Division of Research) ; 03-082.".
- catalog isPartOf "Working paper / Division of Research, Harvard Business School ; 03-082".
- catalog issued "2003".
- catalog issued "c2003.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "[Boston] : Division of Research, Harvard Business School,".
- catalog subject "Globalization.".
- catalog subject "Levitt, Theodore, 1925-2006. Globalization of markets.".
- catalog subject "Markets.".
- catalog title "Theodore Levitt's "The globalization of markets": an evaluation after two decades / Richard S. Tedlow, Rawi Abdelal.".
- catalog type "text".