Selected Product: | Harvard Business Review on Mergers & Acquisitions Paperback Author: Dennis Carey, Robert J. Aiello, Michael D. Watki Publisher: Harvard Business School Press Release Date: 2001-05 ISBN-10: 1578515556 ISBN-13: 9781578515554 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Valuation: Measuring and Managing the Value of Companies, Fourth Edition ISBN-10: 0471702188 ISBN-13: 9780471702184 List Price:$85.00 The Art of M&A Due Diligence ISBN-10: 0786311509 ISBN-13: 0639785317340 List Price:$55.00 Applied Mergers and Acquisitions (Wiley Finance) ISBN-10: 0471395056 ISBN-13: 9780471395058 List Price:$100.00 The Art of M&A Due Diligence ISBN-10: 0786311509 ISBN-13: 9780786311507 List Price:$55.95 Mergers and Acquisitions from A to Z ISBN-10: 081440880X ISBN-13: 9780814408803 List Price:$35.00 The Complete Guide to Mergers and Acquisitions: Process Tools to Support M&A Integration at Every Level (JOSSEY-BASS BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT SERIES) ISBN-10: 078799460X ISBN-13: 9780787994600 List Price:$48.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Harvard Business Review on Mergers & Acquisitions by Dennis Carey, Robert J. Aiello, Michael D. Watki (ISBN-10: 1578515556, ISBN-13: 9781578515554). At this time we have not yet written a review for Harvard Business Review on Mergers & Acquisitions by Dennis Carey, Robert J. Aiello, Michael D. Watki (ISBN-10: 1578515556, ISBN-13: 9781578515554). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Almost every day the papers report another merger, buyout, or joint venture. It's difficult enough to keep track of who owns which company, but it's even more difficult to know if your own company should join in the game. From valuation to integration, this collection helps managers think through what such a strategic move would mean for their organizations. The Harvard Business Review Paperback Series is designed to bring today's managers and professionals the fundamental information they need to stay competitive in a fast-moving world. From the preeminent thinkers whose work has defined an entire field to the rising stars who will redefine the way we think about business, here are the leading minds and landmark ideas that have established the Harvard Business Review as required reading for ambitious businesspeople in organizations around the globe. Outdated; should not be sold anymore | Customer Rating: | I don't think this is a bad collection of articles. However, its contents are no longer relevant today. The book opens with the announced merger of AOL and Time Warner, hailing it as a great development. We now know how spectacularly that deal collapsed. The article then continues with a discussion of how M&A is 'different' in the internet age, and how this justifies ever larger takeover sums. Worldcom is then given as an example; another icon of the excesses of the internet boom that imploded. Participant in the opening discussion is Dennis Kozlowski, who is now serving eight to twenty-five years in prison for his role in the Tyco scandals.
I admit, all of this is entertaining enough from a historical perspective. However, it should be beneath Harvard Business Review to keep on milking no longer relevant content for a few extra dollars profit at airports, college bookstores etc. | Useful | Customer Rating: | | A good review of some old classics. The articles are helpful in building a strong foundation in the subject. | Next best thing . . . | Customer Rating: | | . . . to hanging around with a bunch of practicioners swapping war stories and advise/wisedom/opinion. As the other reviewer said, the advise is at times contradictory, which is exactly what you get from talking to the professionals who do this all the time. There are some thing which everyone agrees on, and much of the rest is personal style. | Good insights - lacks continuity - falls short | Customer Rating: | | This book has a a few very informative articles/chapters. It virtually covers the entire M&A continuum from deal strategy through post merger integration. It has a fatal flaw however due to its format and that is a lack of consistency from one section to the next. By jumping from one author to another, the reader is subjected to guidance that is often contradicted or not considered a few chapters later by another author. That is why I prefer books offering guidance on the subject from a thoughtleader or practitioner who can walk me through the entire process from beginning to end. I am comforted knowing I am not being plied with theory that will be refuted 30 pages later. The book does include some very learned insights from previous authors of HBR articles, which most of us have read before but fails to include others such as Drs. Mark Feldman, Pat Gaughin, David Greenspan, Mark Clemente and Jac Fitz-Enz who are some of the finest minds and true heavyweights in the fields of culture, process, organizational development, and integration. I know because- as a Harvard alumna and corporate strategist for 20 years - I have worked as an employee alongside some of these M&A pioneers at such firms as AT&T, Lucent, IBM, and Citibank watching them give birth to the M&A scriptures. Each has penned their guidance in other less lofty titles which take the reader the whole way through the M&A experience while sharing successes, failures, theory, and case studies. This book is impressive to put on one's shelf and it does indeed have some very practical applications for today's corporate combinations. Yet the comprehensive guidance offered by these other authors eclipses the magazine-like compilation contained herein. It sorely misses their contributions. |
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