[−]
  • Search
Managing in the Next SocietyBlog this item
Look inside at: Amazon | Google

Similar books

Cover of "Managing for Results"
Managing for Results
Cover of "Management Challenges for the 21st Century"
Management Challenges for the 21st Century
Cover of "The Daily Drucker"
The Daily Drucker
Cover of "The Essential Drucker"
The Essential Drucker
Cover of "The American Bureaucracy"
The American Bureaucracy

Book Description

For more than sixty years, Peter Drucker has been the pre-eminent thinker, lecturer, and writer about change and how CEOs, executives, and managers of all kinds, from business to non-profits to government, can better manage the many business and social changes around us. But here, at the start of a new century, change is now a con-stant. In this carefully integrated collection of recent writings, Drucker takes us inside the emergence of the information society-plus six unseen trends that are changing our society in the years immediately ahead. Insightful and prescient, Managing in the Next Society is Drucker at his best.

Book Details
English Books
Rating: (3)
4 stars
3 stars
2 stars
1 star
Paperback 352 Pages
Edition: Reprint
ISBN-10: 0312320116
ISBN-13: 9780312320119
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Pub date: Sep 01, 2003
Dimensions: 20 cm x 14 cm x 2 cm Just how big is that?
Also available as: Hardcover, Audio CD and Audio Cassette
In other languages:
Improve data of this book
Allowed tags <b> → bold, <i> → Italics

FAQ See all

How does the voting work?
Find a comment helpful / unhelpful? Cast your vote. Only one vote from each person will be counted. Every hour we gather all the votes, add them up, add some magic source, and there we have the new sorting for the comments on the page of this book!
I see mistakes in the book information. How can I fix it?

Under "Book details", there is a link labeled "Improve data of this book". You can use that form to send us the correct information.

Why do I sometimes see less people than from last time?
Under the aNobii logo is the location filter. The higher up you go, the more people you see.
Loading ...