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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is about building a sustainable and successful biz the old-fashioned way - by growing from within.

A great book! I loved it. It is broken into nine chapters as follows:

1. Why is organic growth important?
2. Discovering the DNA of organic growth.
3. The organic growth winners: Interesting Facts.
4. An elevator-pitch business model.
5. Instill a "small-company soul" into a "big-company body."
6. Measure everything...
Published on May 5, 2007 by Jeff Lippincott

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3.0 out of 5 stars Grow or Buy - this talks about grow.
I recently read, The Road to Organic Growth How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare From Within by Edward Hess. Companies do it by:


1. They are generally in one business most can define their business in one sentence.

2. The companies are relentlessly focused and disciplined - they do not take their eye off the ball...
Published on July 11, 2008 by Jim Estill


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is about building a sustainable and successful biz the old-fashioned way - by growing from within., May 5, 2007
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)

A great book! I loved it. It is broken into nine chapters as follows:

1. Why is organic growth important?
2. Discovering the DNA of organic growth.
3. The organic growth winners: Interesting Facts.
4. An elevator-pitch business model.
5. Instill a "small-company soul" into a "big-company body."
6. Measure everything.
7. Build a people pipeline.
8. Leaders: humble, passionate, focused operators.
9. Be an execution and technology champion.

Chapters 4 - 9 are the ingredients to building a company through organic growth. If a biz can be explained in a just a few words while riding up an elevator, then it's leaders/managers can probably focus well on growing the business from within. If a biz is comprised of workers who care about the company instead of just showing up to work and collecting a paycheck, then the business will probably grow from within. The business will probably also have a pipeline of new managers if the employees care about coming to work for reasons other than just collecting a paycheck. These are the types of things discussed in the last six chapters of the book.

Generally speaking, companies either grow through "organic growth" or by "mergers and acquisitions." Many companies grow by using both methods, but the author only discusses the organic growth method in this book. There is talk that growth may take place by playing accounting games and engaging in financial manipulations. However, this really is not a method to create growth. Manipulations are just that - shifts of revenues and expenses from one accounting period to another. If there is gain today via manipulation, then there is going to be a loss next week or next month - guaranteed.

A small company soul is what this book is about. And I really enjoyed reading it. I liked the list of "Growth Questions" at the end of each chapter. They helped pull the chapters together for me. If you are putting together a business plan for a start up company, then I recommend you read this book. You will want to incorporate many of the ideas and concepts discussed here into your business plan and your implementation of your business plan.

I would have liked the book better if the print had not been so large. And since the spine of the book was not all that thick I got the feeling that the book was padded by increasing the font size of the text. The book could have been longer if there had been more examples of real world situations regarding what was being discussed. And I would have liked a chapter comparing organic growth to mergers and acquisitions. To discuss organic growth as the best way to grow a company, and to ignore M&A's as though they were a bad way, just didn't feel right to me. In fact, M&A's are a great way to grow a business. But the book was well-written and informative. 5 stars!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic insight with startling conclusions, February 3, 2007
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
Professor Hess' groundbreaking work is a breath of fresh air for those of us who have always been suspicious of the notion that "greed is good". As Professor Hess shows in The Road to Organic Growth, this is clearly not the case. Sustainable results are not built on fancy Wall Street transactions or egomaniacal leadership. They are built by leaders who roll up their sleeves, measure everything, and value the members of their organizations. That is good business. I highly recommend The Road to Organic Growth to business students as well as people suspicious of corporate America. Everyone can learn something from this book.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Grow or Buy - this talks about grow., July 11, 2008
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
I recently read, The Road to Organic Growth How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare From Within by Edward Hess. Companies do it by:


1. They are generally in one business most can define their business in one sentence.

2. The companies are relentlessly focused and disciplined - they do not take their eye off the ball.

3. They drill down to the line-employee level to ensure that their people understand the business and why their job is important, why certain measurements are being made, and how employees can contribute to their own success.

4. They incrementally improve with continual top-line and bottom-line initiatives by

They involve and engage their staff:

The people doing the work need to understand the business and the importance of their individual jobs, as well as how their success will be measured and what is important to the success of the business.
Everyone has to buy into a system of accountability and a culture of constant improvement.

Only by giving employees "ownership" of their jobs can a company truly have a constant improvement culture that works.

People need constant, reliable, and objective feedback in order to learn and improve. So they have a high focus on measuring results.

It was a good book - not great but just good. I did get some ideas and it was an easy, quick read. Certainly was attracted to the title.


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5.0 out of 5 stars Great for every entrepreneur, June 30, 2008
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
Ed Hess' book helped me a great deal. I own/run a small business that espouses similar values that can be found in this book, but it also taught me that in our quest for growth that some of our priorities have clearly been wrong. As a result of this fine, easy to read book, I feel more confident that our company will be kept firmly on the growth curve.

G.M. Ball
[...]
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5.0 out of 5 stars Back to the Basics, April 28, 2007
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This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
This is a phenomenal work. This book provides the attributes and tools of what it really means to "grow" a business. Hess brilliantly reveals some of the most fundamental concepts that make a "great" business great. Pages full of evidence and stories about engaged and loyal people, humble servanthood leadership, dynamic client service, and clear and conscise business models will stir entreprenuers as they read this excellent volume.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A must-read for all executives who want to win., February 23, 2007
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
Hess has done it again. The Six Keys to Organic Growth
cuts through traditional leadership thought to show what great organic
growth leaders really do - execute. This book offers terrific insight into
some of the great organic growth companies. The Six Keys to Organic
Growth should be required reading for all young executives and MBA students who want to win.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Practical Road Map...With Soul, February 23, 2007
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Andrew Fleming (Decatur, GA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
Ed Hess has written a book with strikingly original research, compelling analysis, and real soul. This is an inspiring, challenging, and practical book for executives, consultants, and other business leaders (present and future) who believe that the best, most satisfying, and most sustainable kind of growth comes from within. For the good of their businesses and people--as well as the larger economy and society--organizations would do well to follow Ed Hess' road to organic growth.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The real winners use organic growth, February 6, 2007
This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
Ed Hess has successfully identified the keys to building and growing a successful business: useable business and growth model, owning the customer, obsession with measurement, engaging loyal people, finding leaders for the company, and attention to execution and technological details. This is a must read for those building entrepreneurial businesses.

Thomas Kinnear, Chair and President of the Venture Michigan Fund and Executive Director of the Zell Lurie Institute, Ross School of Business
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Road to Organic Growth, February 5, 2007
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This review is from: The Road to Organic Growth: How Great Companies Consistently Grow Marketshare from Within (Hardcover)
This is a book for leaders who recognize the challenges of growing organically and need practical solutions to meet those challenges.

"The Road to Organic Growth" provides tremendous insights about how to transform an organization by combining six characteristics that lead to sustained growth.
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