Performance Without Compromise: How Emerson Consistently Achieves Winning Results.Performance Without Compromise: How Emerson Consistently Achieves Winning Results. By Charles F. Knight Charles F. Knight is chairman emeritus of Emerson Electric Co., a manufacturer of electrical, electromechanical and electronic products and systems. He served as chairman of Emerson Electric from 1974 to 2004 and as chief executive officer from 1973 to 2000. , with Davis Dyer. Harvard Business School Harvard Business School, officially named the Harvard Business School: George F. Baker Foundation, and also known as HBS, is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. Press, 245 pages. $29.95 [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In some ways, the story of Emerson Electric sounds a bit like that of a family company: In the 46 years from 1954 to 2000, it had only two CEOs. The second of those, Charles F. Knight, served from 1973 to 2000, becoming chief executive at age 37 and leading the company on a tremendous growth spurt growth spurt Pediatrics A period of rapid growth in middle adolescence; ♀ ↑ ±8 cm/yr ±age 12; ♂ ↑ ±10 cm/yr ± age 14; GS is orderly, affecting acral parts–ie, hands and feet grow before proximal regions, that vaulted revenues 15-fold and earnings 18-fold by the time he retired. During that span, moreover, return on shareholders' equity Shareholders' Equity A firms' total assets minus its total liabilities. Equivalently, it is share capital plus retained earnings minus treasury shares. Shareholders' equity is the amount by which a company is financed through common and preferred shares. averaged 15 percent a year. An enviable record, to be sure, and one worth trying to understand. That's why Knight, now chairman emeritus e·mer·i·tus adj. Retired but retaining an honorary title corresponding to that held immediately before retirement: a professor emeritus. n. pl. at Emerson, and his co-author Dyer, a consultant, attempt to explain it. The book looks back over Knight's tenure, providing both a historical chronicle of the decisions Emerson made and a framework for how it was run. In the course of that narrative, Knight makes it clear that the company had to work through adversity time and again, and to continually evolve in terms of managerial talent and depth. A central pillar of the book is a "dynamic management process" that Knight says the company used to "link strategy and action, establish a common set of values, provide a structure for setting priorities, evaluate results and solve problems." These notions are distilled into six key tenets that are laid out in the first chapter. There may be a bit too much detailed company history here for readers who don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. much about Emerson or the electronics industry. But this is a well-written narrative that offers effective lessons about how one company achieved great things. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion