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Steve Jobs vs. Sam Walton: The Tale of the Tape
Oleh:
Serwer, Andy
Jenis:
Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi:
Fortune vol. 166 no. 9 (Dec. 2012)
,
page 58-64.
Topik:
Business Leaders
;
Apple
;
Wal-Mart
;
Most Valuable Company
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan Pusat (Semanggi)
Nomor Panggil:
FF16.48
Non-tandon:
1 (dapat dipinjam: 0)
Tandon:
tidak ada
Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikel
A rare conversation with Walter Isaacson and John Huey, the writers who got inside the heads of these two extraordinary business leaders. When you consider the greatest business minds of the past 100 years, certainly Steve Jobs and Sam Walton have to be at the very top of the list. Jobs created the most valuable company on earth (though down from an all-time high, Apple is still worth more than $500 billion), while Walton founded and built Wal-Mart, the biggest company in the world, with more than $450 billion in sales over the past 12 months. But Jobs and Walton did even more than that. Both created retailing, business, and even societal revolutions. They changed the way we buy, shop, and interact, and even how and where we work and live. The two men were vastly different. Jobs was a business version of a California counterculture icon. Walton was an old-school heartland conservative. And yet they were remarkably similar too: iconoclasts, of course, relentless, and often very tough on the people around them. And that's just for starters. If you really drill down into their lives and careers, all kinds of really cool insights emerge.
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