Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
At Claremont Graduate University, the Peter F. Drucker Graduate Management Center – now the Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management – was established in 1987 and continues to be guided by Drucker's principles. [75] The annual Global Peter Drucker Forum was first held in 2009, the centenary of Drucker's birth. [76]
The Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management, or more commonly, the Drucker School of Management, is the business school of Claremont Graduate University, which is a member of the Claremont Colleges. The school is named in honor of Peter Drucker, who taught management at the school for over 30 years.
Drucker's biographer Jack Beatty referred to it as "a book about business, the way Moby Dick is a book about whaling". [ 1 ] In writing and researching the book, Drucker was given access to General Motors resources, paid a full salary, accompanied CEO Alfred P. Sloan to meetings, and was given free run of the company.
Management by objectives (MBO), also known as management by planning (MBP), was first popularized by Peter Drucker in his 1954 book The Practice of Management. [1] Management by objectives is the process of defining specific objectives within an organization that management can convey to organization members, then deciding how to achieve each objective in sequence.
Peter Drucker: Publisher: HarperCollins: Publication date. 1993: ISBN: 0887306209: Post-Capitalist Society (1993) is a book by management professor and sociologist ...
The first Global Peter Drucker Forum was held on 19 November 2009, marking what would have been the 100th birthday of Peter Drucker. [3] The forum included presentations by management philosopher and author Charles Handy, Kellogg School of Management professor Philip Kotler, economist Peter Lorange, economist and consultant Fredmund Malik, C.K. Prahalad of the Stephen M. Ross School of ...
In 1993, Peter Drucker outlined a possible evolution of capitalistic society in his book Post-Capitalist Society. In 1993, Peter Drucker outlined a possible evolution of capitalistic society in his book Post-Capitalist Society. [1] This states that knowledge, rather than capital, land, or labor, is the new basis of wealth.
The term 'knowledge work' appeared in The Landmarks of Tomorrow (1959) by Peter Drucker. [12] Drucker later coined the term 'knowledge worker' in The Effective Executive [13] in 1966. Later, in 1999, he suggested that "the most valuable asset of a 21st-century institution, whether business or non-business, will be its knowledge workers and ...