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Broken Business

Seven Steps to Reform Good Companies Gone Bad

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"Facebook, Oxfam, Volkswagen, FIFA, Wells Fargo, Lehman Bros., ABN-AMRO, South-west Airlines, Shell, Rabobank, Deutsche Bank, Panama Papers... Why do good companies go bad? Why do corporate scandals happen so often? Is corruption and misconduct in business inevitable? And, on a more pragmatic level, what can business leaders do about it? What can they do to save their companies when scandal strikes, or what can they do to avoid scandal in the first place? Jose Hernandez has put decades of experience into Broken Business, to show that the popular perception that 'just a few bad apples' are usually the problem, isn't true. He clearly defines the problem and shares seven steps to both address a corporate scandal and to install the structures and culture to support integrity and good conduct. Because misconduct is inevitable, but scandal is not"-- Provided by publisher

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Broken Business, José R. Hernandez

Idioma
Publicado en
2018
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Título
Broken Business
Subtítulo
Seven Steps to Reform Good Companies Gone Bad
Idioma
Inglés
Publicado en
2018
Formato
Tapa dura
Páginas
352
ISBN10
1119547504
ISBN13
9781119547501
Serie
Calificación
4,1 de 5
Descripción
"Facebook, Oxfam, Volkswagen, FIFA, Wells Fargo, Lehman Bros., ABN-AMRO, South-west Airlines, Shell, Rabobank, Deutsche Bank, Panama Papers... Why do good companies go bad? Why do corporate scandals happen so often? Is corruption and misconduct in business inevitable? And, on a more pragmatic level, what can business leaders do about it? What can they do to save their companies when scandal strikes, or what can they do to avoid scandal in the first place? Jose Hernandez has put decades of experience into Broken Business, to show that the popular perception that 'just a few bad apples' are usually the problem, isn't true. He clearly defines the problem and shares seven steps to both address a corporate scandal and to install the structures and culture to support integrity and good conduct. Because misconduct is inevitable, but scandal is not"-- Provided by publisher