Slater's second book on General Electric's chief executive officer Jack Welch in a little over a year appears to be based on his reseach for the previous work, The New GE: How Jack Welch Revived an American Institution ( LJ 10/1/92). Slater's intent is to create a "manager's little instruction book" from 31 of Welch's "secrets." These "secrets," e.g., aphorisms such as "managing less is managing better" and "go for the quantum leap," are marginally interesting insights into Welch. Often, direct quotes from Welch are used to explain what he means, but the "secrets" are not fully developed. If one wants to understand Welch better, Noel Tichy's Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will ( LJ 1/93) is probably a better book. Recommended only for comprehensive collections.
- Michael D. Kathman, St. John's Univ. Lib., Collegeville, Minn.Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Over a dozen new chapterson everything from Workout to Six Sigma to
e-Business
How to Think, Talk, and Lead Like Jack Welch, History's Most Celebratedand SuccessfulCEO
"If leadership is an art, then surely Welch has proved himself a master painter."
BusinessWeek
"Wall Street and Main Street have been spoiled by Mr. Welch and his extraordinary performance."
The Wall Street Journal
"Perhaps the most admired CEO of his generation."
Fortune
Since it first hit business bestseller lists, Get Better or Get Beaten has shown over 100,000 executives how to understand the secretsand emulate the successesof GE's legendary CEO Jack Welch. Now completely revised and updated with rules for managers in today's transformed economy, this fast-paced classic provides proven leadership imperatives for every situation, regardless of industry.
From Secret #1 ("Harness the power of change") to Secret #29 ("Use e-Business to put the final nail in bureaucracy"), Get Better or Get Beaten is today's most straightforward, easy-to-follow blueprint for real-world success. Read it, learn from it, and use it to follow in the footsteps of corporate history's most honored CEOGE's Jack Welch.
"Slater distills Welch's business philosophyan amalgam of Zen-like axioms, bromides, and tough-minded pragmatismin a way that will reward managers at all levels who seek to create a learning environment and transform learning into action."
Publisher's Weekly, on the national bestseller Jack Welch and the GE Way
Jack Welch built GE into the most successful American corporation of the late 20th century. He accomplished this by focusing on quality, insisting on innovation, and forging a series of innovative business strategies that transformed GE from an overly bureaucratic, slow moving, and self-satisfied dinosaur into a lean, agile competitor.
Like Jack Welch himself, Get Better or Get Beaten, 2nd Edition, continues to carve its own path and call its own shots. Updated to reflect the realities of today's 24/7/365 global e-conomy, this classic management manifesto gets in your face and tells you what you need to know. For virtually every business situation, it answers one overriding question"What would Welch do?"with clarity, purpose, and a singular focus on achieving bottom-line results.
Small enough to fit in your coat pocket, yet bursting with Welch's leadership secrets on every page, it paints a compelling picture of how to teach employeesand yourselfto accept nothing but the best. Look inside to discover:
- Strategies Welch used to pull off the largest acquisition in GE's historythe stunning $48-billion purchase of Honeywell
- How Welch is using e-communication to energize and revitalize every corner of GEfrom the mailroom to the boardroom
- The inside story on Six SigmaWelch's sweeping quality initiative that is the foundation of GE's success
Jack Welch is a no-nonsense leader and has acknowledged that, when preparing for a speech, he has frequently peeked into Get Better or Get Beaten. Hard-hitting and honest, it is today's most entertaining and enlightening book on climbing to the top of today's corporate ladderand doing what it takes to stay there.