2009-12-31 02:04:52frank

[Thinker] 現今最有影響力的五十位管理大師

英國的泰晤士報(Times)與馬德里IE商學院的兩位客座教授,並同為倫敦商學院管理創新實驗室同事的Des Dearlove 和 Stuart Crainer列出了作有影響力的管理思想家50位。

列為榜首的是普哈拉(C.K. Prahalad)以他所著作的金字塔底層大商機(The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid)一書連任第一名。普哈拉(C.K. Prahalad)稍早之前的著作都是和蓋瑞‧哈默爾(Gary Hamel)合作的;兩人於哈佛商業評論(Harvard Business Review)上共同發表的「策略企圖心」(Strategic Intent)及「企業核心專長」(The Core Competence of the Corporation)兩篇文章或得了麥金塞獎(McKinsey Prizes),讓兩人晉身管理學大師之列。或許我應該把這本書找來看一看!--2010年就是戰後嬰兒潮的世代開始退休了,除了退休老人的商機,還有金字塔底層的商機。

被選入第二名的是葛拉威爾,他的理論頗為有趣:影響決策優劣的關鍵,不在能夠快速處理資訊,而是在於全神貫注的特定焦點。但是當上榜眼是因為異數(Outliers)一書,剛上了博客來書店看了書摘,又是一本我沒看過的書。

摘自博客來書店的內容簡介:
天賦、家世、學歷、努力還不夠,之所以超群成為「異數」,還牽涉周遭的人和環境。能不能成為運動明星,要看你幾月出生;數學好不好,要看祖先是不是種稻。作者引用大量統計科學辯證,大開我們的視野,重新發現「出身」的意義:誰能成功,多少人能成功,要看我們生活在什麼樣的社會。

名列第三位的是保羅‧克魯格曼(Paul Krugman),還念書時,曾讀到雜誌(印象中是天下)介紹了他在Foreign Affairs的一篇論文「亞洲奇蹟的神話」,他的觀察亞洲的奇蹟多源於資源的動員(mobilization),意指生產力的提升才是這種奇蹟能否持續的要素。東亞各國以往藉由勞動力和資本等生產因素所造就的「經濟奇蹟」,已因生產因素的衰竭與技術無法進一步提升而接近尾聲。兩年半後亞洲金融風暴,似乎印證克魯曼預言,使他聲名大噪。一直到他在去(2008)年獲頒諾貝爾獎,看了相關報導才知道,以前念國貿理論裡關於產業內(intra-industry)貿易的理論是他提出來的。Krugman是紐約時報的專欄作家,以前要成為紐約時報的付費會員才能讀到他的專欄,自從The New York Times不收費以後就很常讀Krugman的文章,雖然有不少美國國內的問題,很難理解,不過挺喜歡讀他罵小布希的文章,讀起來很過癮(Norm Chomsky的也是)!

Thinkers 50名單與簡介如下請參考。



From The Times
14-Oct-09
C. K. Prahalad remains the world's most influential management thinker


(3Handout)        
Coimbatore Krishna Rao Prahalad - better known as C.K. Prahalad - is Professor of Strategy at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. Professor Prahalad, who introduced the term 'core competencies' to the management lexicon, is the author of several bestselling management books, notably The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, published in 2004, which argued that the world's poor represented a market worth up to $13 trillion a year        

Carol Lewis         

Bookshop shelves groan under the weight of management coaching tomes of all styles and sizes. From Peter Drucker’s 600-page classic MBA text Management to a new paperback Are you a Badger or a Doormat? by Rosie Miller, an executive coach, there is no shortage of volunteers ready to teach managers how to lead people, market brands or draw up bottom line-boosting strategies.       

groan  vt.  1. 呻吟著說   2. 發哼哼聲使沉默[阻止]
tome    n.   (多卷本著作的)冊,卷;(大本)書,大冊書;學術書

But which, if any, of these authors and strategies makes a difference in the real world of business? To answer this question, The Times works with Des Dearlove and Stuart Crainer, visiting professors at IE Business School in Madrid and associates at London Business School’s Management Innovation Lab, to compile The Thinkers 50, a biennial list of the most influential living management thinkers.        

And this year, for the second time in a row, C. K. Prahalad, author of The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, has been voted the most influential living management thinker. “His influence on the business world is immense,” Mr Dearlove says.        

In 2001, when the list began, Peter Drucker, dubbed “the man who invented management” by BusinessWeek, topped the list. After his death in 2005, Michael Porter, the strategist, took pole position, followed by Professor Prahalad in 2007.        

Only 19 of the original 2001 Thinkers 50 are in the 2009 list. Paul Krugman and Don Tapscott, who were included in 2001, return after a break.        

While Professor Prahalad retains his crown this year, Professor Porter drops to eleventh position. Other management thinkers who retain positions in the top ten are Chan Kim, Renée Mauborgne, Bill Gates (who falls from second to seventh place), Sir Richard Branson and Gary Hamel.        

Straight in at third and sixth place this year are two Noble Prize-winners: Professor Krugman and Muhammad Yunus, champion of microcredit and founder of Grameen Bank. The presence of professors Prahalad and Yunus underlines the focus during the recession on what is being called caring capitalism, or “creative capitalism” to use the term preferred by Mr Gates.        

Professor Prahalad is one of six Indian-born management thinkers to make the 2009 listing. Joining him are Ratan Tata, chief executive of Tata Industries, at No 12; Ram Charan, executive coach, at No 13; S. (Kris) Gopalakrishnan, founder of Infosys, at No 15; Vijay Govindarajan, of Tuck Business School, at No 24; and Rakesh Khurana, of Harvard Business School, at No 44.      

Shooting up the charts from eighteenth to second place is Malcolm Gladwell, a Canadian journalist who has dominated newspaper column inches in the past year with his book on clever people, Outliers.       

outlier  n. 1. 睡在戶外的人;不住在工作地點者;離開本體的部分,分離物;孤島;飛地
              2. [地] 離層,外露層
                      3. [統] 奇異值大大偏離通常分佈的數值

Including Mr Gladwell, there are 18 non-Americans in the 2009 ranking. Canada is well represented, with four: Mr Gladwell is joined by Roger Martin (a champion of “integrated thinking”), at No 32; Professor Tapscott, at No 39 and Henry Mintzberg, the anti-MBA strategist, at No 33.        

Women are under-represented in management, which goes some way to explain why there are only five female management thinkers in the listing.        

More than 3,000 people, including timesonline readers, voted in The Thinkers 50. The top 100 thinkers were then assessed against ten criteria, including originality of ideas, impact, presentation style, research rigour and business sense, with business schools and management experts consulted.        

For the first time there is a second list — of up-and-coming management thinkers to watch. They range from academics, such as Linda Scott, Professor of Marketing at the University of Oxford, to Clay Shirky, the New York technology commentator.        

The top 20

1. CK Prahalad

Indian-born author of The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid

2. Malcolm Gladwell

Journalist-guru who wrote Outliers

3. Paul Krugman

Noble Prize-winning economist

4. Steve Jobs

Apple chief executive

5. W Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne

Creators of Blue Ocean Strategy

6. Muhammad Yunus

Microcredit guru and bank founder

7. Bill Gates

Microsoft’s “creative capitalist”

8. Sir Richard Branson

Virgin entrepreneur

9. Philip Kotler

Marketing managers’ favourite

10. Gary Hamel

Creator of Management 2.0

11. Michael Porter

Long-reigning king of strategy

12. Ratan Tata

Chairman of Indian corporate Tata

13. Ram Charan

Indian philosopher and coach

14. Marshall Goldsmith

Coach to top chief executives

15. S Kris Gopalakrishnan

Chief executive of Infosys

16. Howard Gardner

Harvard academic

17. Jim Collins

Good to Great author

18. Lynda Gratton

Creator of Hot Spots and Glow

19. Tom Peters

Still In Search of Excellence

20. Jack Welch

Former GE chief-turned-guru

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/management/article6873407.ece


13-Oct-09

The Thinkers' 50: the full list
The most influential living management thinkers

Des Dearlove and Stuart Crainer

1: CK Prahalad (1)

Professor of Strategy at Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. His book The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid transformed the Indian-born professor from bestselling academic to global opinion former.

2: Malcolm Gladwell (18)

The rise of the journalist turned guru has been inexorable. His latest bestseller, Outliers, charted the routes to success of the worlds most successful people.

3: Paul Krugman (-)

The Nobel prize winning economist has taken the dry science to the masses as never before. He has written more than 25 books and has made the leap from serious academic work to accessible commentary.

4: Steve Jobs (29)

The founder and chief executive of Apple has caught manager's imaginations despite his health problems.

5: W. Chan Kim & Renée Mauborgne (6)

The INSEAD creators of Blue Ocean Strategy practise what they preach

6: Muhammad Yunus (-)

Champion of microcredit, founder of Grameen Bank and Nobel prize winner, the Bangladeshi is author of Banker to the Poor.

7: Bill Gates (2)

Once desperately uncool, Gates is now the epitome of caring capitalism – something he calls “creative capitalism.”

8: Richard Branson (9)

The founder and chief executive of Virgin retains his insatiable appetite for PR stunts and entrepreneurial endeavour.

9: Philip Kotler (11)

The professor of marketing at Kellogg School of Management's latest book, Chaotics, reflects his willingness to go out on a limb and express an opinion.

10: Gary Hamel (5)

London Business School's visiting professor is a founder of the school's Management Laboratory. His last book, The Future of Management, champions the renaissance of management what he calls Management 2.0.

11: Michael Porter (4)

The long reigning King of Strategy's business models are taught in every business school in the world.

12: Ratan Tata (-)

Cornell-educated, Ratan Tata has been chairman of Indian corporate giant Tata since 1991 - an empire with sales of some $70 billion.

13: Ram Charan (22)

The coach of choice to some of the world’s top chief executives. His message is a worldly combo of tough exec and Indian philosophising.

14: Marshall Goldsmith (34)

This coach's wisdom can appear homespun – saying please and thank you – but he has the happy knack of making the complex world of business feel straightforward. An invite to his client dinner parties is a mark that you have made it.

15: S. (Kris) Gopalakrishnan (-)

In 1981 the Indian company Infosys began life. Its seven founders had $250. Now, it has revenues of more than $4 billion and one of the seven founders is its chief executive, Kris Gopalakrishnan.

16: Howard Gardiner (39)

Harvard-based psychologist who's influence and his ideas on multiple intellgences are major league.

17: Jim Collins (10)

Good to Great and Built to Last made Jim Collins one of the biggest names in the guru firmament.

18: Lynda Gratton (19)

Her book Hot Spots was a breakthrough moment for the London Business School professor. Now, with her new book, Glow, the big time beckons.

19: Tom Peters (7)

The co-author of In Search of Excellence should be an anachronism by now. Next up is a new book, The Little Big Things, promising 179 ways of pursuing excellence.

20: Jack Welch (8)

For the former GE chief retirement means penning bestsellers with his wife, speaking at rock-sized venues and being a columnist and blogger.

21: Eric Schmidt (-)

Chairman and chief executive of Google. And he was until recently on the board of the uber-funky Apple. He also advised and campaigned for Barack Obama.

22: Joseph Stiglitz (-)

Heavyweight American economist, Stiglitz won the Nobel Prize in 2001 for his work on information asymmetry, with George A. Akerlof and A. Michael Spence. A professor at Columbia University and former chief economist at the World Bank.

23: Kjell Nordstrom & Jonas Ridderstralle (13)

The Scandinavian funksters leapt to prominence thanks to their 1999 bestseller Funky Business. They have spent the years since refining their funky gospel in Karaoke Capitalism and taking their message to the world.

24: Vijay Govindarajan (23)

Now working as a special adviser on innovation to GE, the Tuck Business School professor is an astute networker. His latest work looks at GE’s take on Globalization 2.0.

25: Marcus Buckingham (38)

Armed with a master’s degree in social and political science from Cambridge University, Marcus Buckingham has sold nearly 4 million copies of his books including First, Break All the Rules, The One Thing You Need to Know and The Truth About You.

26: Richard D’Aveni (46)

Tuck Business School's professor of strategic management is on the rise thanks to his 1990s bestseller, Hypercompetition. His new book, Beating the Commodity Trap, tackles one of the biggest business issues of our time.

27: Rosabeth Moss Kanter (28)

An outstanding intellect with a series of bestsellers behind her, the Harvard Business School professor has taken a more populist route with her last book Confidence.

28: Clayton Christensen (25)

In his most recent books, Disrupting Class and The Innovator's Prescription, the Harvard professor and author of the Innovator's Dilemma, turns his disruptive attention to education and healthcare.

29: Stephen Covey (15)

Seven Habits of Effective People has become a cottage industry and Stephen Covey a modern-day Dale Carnegie.

30: Thomas Friedman (26)

The New York Times columnist has hardly put a foot wrong in the last decade. First was The Lexus and the Olive Tree, then Longitudes and Attitudes, The World is Flat and most recently Hot, Flat and Crowded.

31: David Ulrich (42)

Doyen of HR David Ulrich is a professor at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and co-founder and partner of The RBL Group, a human resources and leadership consultancy.

32: Roger Martin (-)

Champion and cheerleader of integrative thinking. Dean of the Rotman School of Management his 2007 book The Opposable Mind: How Successful Leaders Win Through Integrative Thinking brought a fresh perspective to bear on leadership.

33: Henry Mintzberg (16)

The Canadian strategist has always been an engagingly smart and opinionated figure in the business firmament. His next book is a magnum opus, Managing, which attempts to turn Mintzberg into Drucker-like older statesman.

34: Daniel Goleman (37)

The bearded psychologist and former New York Times journalist has spread the gospel of emotional intelligence -- and more recently social intelligence -- to a largely grateful business world.

35: Chris Anderson (-)

Only time will tell whether the author of The Long Tail will have a prolonged thought leadership shelf life. Editor-in-chief of Wired and formerly with the Economist, has followed up his bestseller with Free.

36: Warren Bennis (24)

Virtually single-handed, the University of Southern California professor invented the modern study of leadership.

37: Robert Kaplan & David Norton (12)

The creators of the balanced scorecard retain huge influence on the actual practice of management.

38: Jeff Immelt (31)

There is something strange going on when the current CEO of one of the world’s biggest and most admired companies lags behind his predecessor. But, GE chief executive Immelt has grown used to living in Jack Welch’s shadow.

39: Don Tapscott (-)

The Canadian Tapscott dropped out of the Thinkers 50 after the dot-com implosion. But, over the last two years he has charged back to the forefront of thinking thanks largely to his latest book Grown Up Digital.

40: Nassim Nicholas Taleb (-)

Lebanese-born Taleb is best known for his 2007 book, The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable.

41: John Kotter (30)

One of the world’s foremost authorities on change and leadership. In his classic work, Leading Change, Kotter cites eight steps that are essential for leading successful change.

42: Niall Ferguson (-)

Ferguson’s bestselling book and TV series The Ascent of Money also elevated his reputation as a business thinker. Unusually for an historian, Ferguson teaches at both Harvard University and Harvard Business School.

43: Charles Handy (14):

While other business gurus, shout their message with ever-increasing stridency, this British management expert personifies the softly, softly approach.

44: Rakesh Khurana (45)

The Harvard professor is a thoroughly modern business school academic complete with website, blog and media friendliness.

45: Manfred Kets de Vries (-)

The Dutch leadership and organisational behaviour expert Manfred Kets de Vries straddles the two worlds of management and psychoanalysis. Now based at INSEAD, he is best known for his work exploring the darker side of organisational life.

46: Tammy Erickson (-)

Describing herself as “fundamentally optimistic” the preside of the nGenera Innovation Network's books include What’s Next, Gen X?, Plugged In: The Generation Y Guide to Thriving at Work and Retire Retirement.

47: Costas Markides (44)

The tennis-playing, Manchester United supporting London Business School management professor is one of the true stars of the executive education classroom. He can work an audience, but he also possesses a sharp mind.

48: Barbara Kellerman (-)

For the professor of leadership at the JOhn F Kennedy School of Government, an interest in leadership is part of the human condition. Her recent book is Followership: How Followers Are Creating Change and Changing Leaders.

49: Rob Goffee & Gareth Jones (32)

Best known for their work on authentic leadership, the London Business School professors' latest book is called Clever!

50: Jimmy Wales (-)

Wales is the new Jeff Bezos - the co-founder and promoter of Wikipedia. He previously worked in finance.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/management/article6873318.ece
威爾剛 2019-12-20 13:21:49

感謝分享!

http://www.yyj.tw/

M 2010-01-01 23:29:56

To my surprise, it was news in Oct last year. It is a great topic for review. I did not hear any colleague mention about that but the book “Outliers”. The publication debuted at number one on the bestseller lists for The New York Times and The Globe and Mail in November 2008. If you are interested in reading it, I can get one for you. Do you prefer Chinese or English version?

版主回應
Times, a British newspaper, who likes this kind of list a lot. You can find all kinds of ranking lists on its stories. 2010-01-02 20:48:46