Good to Great by Jim Collins
I need a book report summarizing the book `Good to Great` by Jim Collins Good to great was published in 2001 by a business guru named Jim Collins . The book is an interesting read because it demonstrates Collins learning about various great companies . He especially emphasizes companies that went from being good companies and became world renowned extraordinary companies . The book is written purely from his own experiences as a student and teacher . The book became immensely popular in its genre of Business , Finance and Law books and is still read today

br by those companies that are trying to make a leap towards greatness
Good to Great was a scientific research project which took almost five years to compile . He found 11 companies that showed 6 .9 times higher stock returns as compared to the general market . With the help of his twenty researchers he devised various theories that helped explain how 11 companies became great . It took various interviews and almost 15000 hours of research to compile the results . He made two groups of companies . One of the groups contained companies that sustained their greatness while another that made the short-term greatness transition but could not hold on to it for long . The companies that showed long term greatness were Abbott , Circuit City , Fannie Mae , Gillette Kimberly-Clark , Kroger , Nucor , Philip Morris , Pitney Bowes , Walgreens and Wells Fargo
The transition to greatness exhibited by companies was divided by the author into three stages . It started off with the Build Up , Breakthrough and finally the Flywheel . In the Build up stage the aspects Level 5 Leadership , First Who then what , and Confront the Brutal Facts were discussed
Level 5 Leadership traits were the opposite of what was proposed to be exhibited by Great Leaders . He mentioned that saviors of companies come from within the company and not from outside . Lee Iacocca the CEO of Chrysler is often though to be a great leader . However , Collins research shows that Level 5 leaders that make GTG transitions have very different personality traits than those traits demonstrated by the boisterous and tenacious Lee Iacocca . GTG leaders were humble , modest and understated individuals that looked nothing like the charismatic CEO 's on the cover page of Fortune 500 . Level 5 leaders only cared about their companies and almost gave up on personal success and ambition
Another interesting part of the book was First Who then What which detailed how the CEO of the 11 GTG 's had a similar organizational strategy . They hired the right people sometimes without even knowing what their task or role in the company would be . They concentrated solely on getting `the right people on the bus and the wrong people off the bus ' even before they knew where the bus was headed
Confronting the brutal facts depicted that the 11 GTG companies did not shy away from free flow of information throughout the different levels of management . This meant that each and every employee had equal information , equal chance to...
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