Ben Franklin's 12 Rules of Management

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McGraw-Hill Education, 01.12.1999 - 240 Seiten

Start a Revolution in Your Management Thinking!

Although Ben Franklin is best known for being a patriot, diplomat, and inventor, he first rose from obscurity to become one of the most influential and successful business owners in Colonial America. In fact, Franklin was so successful that he was able to retire at age 42 to pursue his other, more well known interests.

Franklin chronicled his early life through The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. Drawing upon that book's wealth of wisdom, Ben Franklin's 12 Rules of Management explores the innovative management principles and philosophies this "Founding Father of American Business" pioneered, including:

  • Great managers rarely have great beginnings
  • Seek first to manage yourself, then to manage others
  • Influence is more important than victory
  • Become a revolutionary for positive experimentation and change
  • Sometimes it's better to do 1,001 small things right than one large thing right
  • Incentive is everything

Whether you're an entrepreneur, a mid-level manager, or a Fortune 500 executive, Ben Franklin's 12 Rules of Management will inspire you to integrate Franklin's wisdom into your everyday life and show you how to use his revolutionary management philosophies to improve your performance and more effectively manage your business.

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Inhalt

Great Managers Rarely Have Great Beginnings
3
A Simple Recipe For Lifelong Learning
19
How To Manage Other Effectively
35
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Autoren-Profil (1999)

Blaine McCormick, Ph.D. A former human resources professional for a Fortune 500 company, Dr. McCormick is an assistant professor of management at the Hankamer School of Business at Baylor University. Dr. McCormick is also the author of At Work With Thomas Edison: 10 Business Lessons From America's Greatest Innovator.

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