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Mean Business: How I Save Bad Companies and Make Good Companies Great
 
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Mean Business: How I Save Bad Companies and Make Good Companies Great [Audiobook] [Audio Cassette]

Albert J. Dunlap (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 27, 1996
Al Dunlap is an outspoken, irascible executive with an incredible track recordof injecting new life into tired companies. In 1994, Dunlap became CEO and chairman of floundering Scott Paper, merged it with Kimberly-Clark, and increased stock value by 163%. Mean Business combines Dunlap's colorful history an his provocative ideas on management and leadership to provide an essential tool for companies in trouble and those at the top of their game. Simultaneous hardcover release from Times Books. 2 cassettes.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Al Dunlap, whose corporate behavior has earned him nicknames like The Shredder, took over as CEO of Scott Paper when the venerable paper goods manufacturer was on the brink of death. His ultimately successful efforts at corporate resuscitation are recounted in his typically colorful and exhilarating manner in Mean Business: How I Save Bad Companies and Make Good Companies Great, written with Bob Andelman. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Company turnaround specialist Dunlap is termed by his critics "Rambo in Pinstripes" or "Chainsaw Al." Most recently notable for a 16-month stint at Scott Paper during which company stock rose 163% (Dunlop sold off non-core businesses and cut executive perks), he now heads the appliance maker Sunbeam. Dunlap scorns trendy management theories and considers downsizing not a bandwagon action but a response to a company's fundamental weaknesses. His formula appears deceptively simple: pick a good (and small) team, figure out what business you are in, concentrate only on that, cut costs and market your product well. He approaches boards in a similar fashion, arguing that all directors should buy stock when they join, be paid only in stock, serve no more than five years and never forget they work for the stockholders. Much of Dunlap's argument makes sense, and he is probably right when he says that he would not be hired if managers had done their jobs right. But, having made his reputation now, he'd do well to take the chip off his shoulder and stop positioning himself as "A Nothing Kid from Hoboken" who takes cheap shots at Harvard M.B.A.s. Author tour.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Random House Audio (August 27, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679456082
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679456087
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 4.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,551,171 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

38 Reviews
5 star:
 (12)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (15)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (38 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hype at its essentials. An assortment of over-simplified views on business management., October 9, 2005
By 
lofey (Hong Kong SAR, China) - See all my reviews
I read selective chapters of this book in advising a student's translation project. I'm not an expert in the business field but I found this book (at least the chapters I read) filled with over-simplified views on business activities.

Dunlap was laureated as the "Company turnaround specialist" by admirers. He described his experience of saving companies from bankrupting and making their stock prices climb. Here's my few thoughts about the ideas preached in this book:

1) Dunlap's ideas are nothing original. For example, he repeatedly emphasize in the book that the vital method of running a business is to "cut unnecessary cost" and "maximize efficiency" of the management team. One can find "insights" like these in any college business management textbook. Members of the former management team would look dumb if the their total efforts and wisdom added together didn't outweigh Dunlap's. Is it possible?

2) People are considered nothing more than "human resources" (resources basically, just happened to be human) utilized by the firm in profit-generation. That's Tenet One in Capitalist Management Ideology and I don't wanna challenge its moral basis. "Driving people to achieve their best through pushing and rewarding" is no discovery of New Continent to any CEO (or college kid). I was surprised when I read Dunlap, filled with self-complacency, described how he acted according to the above "insights" in carrying out "corporate resuscitation". But then, what couldn't be done if people are not treated as distinct humans but corporate consumables? In the eyes of people like Dunlap (people in sympathy with his views are everywhere), stock price or accumulation of capital rather than people in the first place are viewed as the primary goals. I beg to differ with this mentality.

3) The idea of Dunlap, whether flattered by the superficial media or explicitly self-boosting, as the savior of failing companies is strongly in doubt. The climbing up of a company's stock price after Dunlap took charge might not be simply the result of his "insightful leadership". Stock price is a multiple-factors controlled variable. It could reflect the actual value or the "perceived" value of a company. The latter could be hugely influential. Dunlap has become a brand-name, a commodity in itself. The association of a company with the brand-name would affect the expectations of speculators, and might boost its stock price. This phenomenon is not restricted in business. Any hype concerning celebrity, advertising or fake-medicine behaves similarly.

The public needs a hero and they make one for themselves, which makes failure easier to explain and more palatable. Mechanism of Hype production.

Save your time for things more meaningful. Life is too brief for wasting on books and ideas like that. Not recommended. I would rate it zero star if I can.
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Good Ideas but..., March 25, 2000
I read this book when it first came out in hardcover, and was very impressed by Dunlap's beliefs and methods. Now that the smoke has cleared with Dunlap's fiasco at Sunbeam and the recent biography "Chainsaw", I find this book to be fairly shabby. For one thing, Dunlap only seemed to be concerned with the price of the stock, rather than the rate of return on the investment. He says that one should not cut jobs just to increase the share price, yet he boasted about improving the share price (which at Sunbeam, crashed after he was sacked). A share price should reflect the profit which a company makes, not by what type of actions the chairman makes. He sold Scott to Kimberly Clark for a fairly hefty sum, but now that buyout seems to have less value than originally anticipated. Rather than building up what's best in a corporation, he seems to cut them down to size (which speculatively increases their value) and sell them off while the going's good. Good value for him, provded that he sells off his shares, but for the long term shareholders, it's a rip off. Second, I admire the idea of corporations streamlining the management process, and thowing away the corporate toys. He feels that executives should not be excessively paid, and i admire the idea of executives being paid in stock, having to buy stock out of their own pocket, and accepting term limits and conflict of interest rules. However, according to "Chainsaw" he seemed to have many of the perks (like a bodyguard and room for his dogs at a hotel) which he claims an executive should be denied. He feels that executives should not be excessively paid, and I admire the idea of executives being paid in stock, having to buy stock out of their own pocket, and accepting term limits and conflict of interest rules. Yet, his infatuation with the value of the share (rather than the rate of return) forces the executives to focus more and more on the short term, rather than the long term. This seems to be in contradiction to his marketing idea of a high margin, rather than an high volume of sales. Third, his autobiography seems to be a fraud. According to Chainsaw, his father was not a dock worker/union steward, but a boiler maker. The family had a nice middle class lifestyle, not the poverty which Dunlap has described. Dunlap makes no reference to his sister, his first wife, to whom he seemed abusive, or to his son Troy, to whom he refused to help with his college tuition and whom he wrote out of his will. Finally, Dunlap claims to have admiration for his parents, yet he did not even attend their funerals. Mean Business really hints at what type of ego Dunlap has, through his continual boasting about his accomplishments in creating shareholder value. Chainsaw, on the other hand, expands on this, showing what type of a tyrant this man is, ruthlessly screaming at employees for hours on end (and even sexually harassing one of them) and expecting them to at his beck and call. In theory, his ideas seem fairly sound, but in practice, I feel that focusing exclusively on the value of a share price will have extremely dire long term consequences.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Give it a miss, March 24, 2001
By 
Robert lewis (MELBOURNE, VIC Australia) - See all my reviews
Self-serving, self promotional pulp fiction. It should have its name changed to "My Resume".

For a more balanced view read "Chainsaw" by John A Byrne.

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