Big Blues: The Unmaking of IBM

by Paul Carroll

Paperback, 1994

Status

Available

Call number

338.7

Collection

Publication

Three Rivers Press (1994), Paperback, 377 pages

Description

"With the introduction of the IBM PC in the early 1980s, IBM stood poised to extend its dominance of the computer industry well into the twenty-first century." "The meteoric rise of competitors like Microsoft, Apple, Intel, Compaq, Sun, and others derailed IBM's dream of controlling the future. Tens of thousands of IBM employees consequently lost their jobs, their retirement hopes, and their security. And investors saw their savings shrivel." "In Big Blues, Wall Street Journal reporter Paul Carroll attributes IBM's downfall mainly to a lethal combination of corporate hubris, inflexibility, and an inability to understand what was happening in the computer marketplace. While tracing every misstep by this corporate giant and its leaders, Carroll fills Big Blues with behind-the-scenes revelations and entertaining anecdotes about major players in the computer and software industries such as IBM chieftain John F. Akers, and rivals Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Mitch Kapor and others. The result is the riveting inside story of the people and the policies that knocked IBM from its pedestal as a golden symbol of American corporate might." "In its depiction of how IBM's advantages became its handicaps, Big Blues tells one of the most instructive and important business stories of our time."--Jacket.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member lesserbrain
A great snapshot of America in the transition from industry to post-industrial nation. A true classic American corporation which (at the time of this books publication) did not make the transition to a soon to be 21st century world.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

377 p.; 7.98 inches

ISBN

0517882213 / 9780517882214

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