Berkshire Beyond Buffett : The Enduring Value of Values (Chapter 8)
Berkshire Hathaway, the $300 billion conglomerate that Warren Buffett built, is among the world's largest and most famous corporations. Yet, for all its power and celebrity, few people understand Berkshire, and many assume it cannot survive without Buffett. This book proves them wrong. In a comprehensive portrait of the corporate culture that unites Berkshire's subsidiaries, Lawrence Cunningham unearths the traits that assure the conglomerate's perpetual prosperity. Riveting stories of each subsidiary's origins, triumphs, and journey to Berkshire reveal how managers generate economic value from intangibles like thrift, integrity, entrepreneurship, autonomy, and a sense of permanence. In chapter 8, excerpted here, Cunningham discusses the value of autonomy in a business organization, highlighting Berkshire's Pampered Chef subsidiary and noting the model and some of its limits at its Scott Fetzer subsidiary. The chapter portrays Berkshire's embrace of autonomy as reflecting a trust-based model of corporate governance, in contrast to the prevailing control-oriented model. It dramatizes with a close look at the case of David Sokol, a top Berkshire executive widely seen as Buffett's heir apparent, until his purchase of the stock of a potential Berkshire takeover target caused a rare scandal at the conglomerate
In: GWU Law School Public Law Research Paper No. 2014-45
Nach Informationen von SSRN wurde die ursprüngliche Fassung des Dokuments 2014 erstellt
Classification:
L1 - Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance ; L2 - Firm Objectives, Organization, and Behavior ; M10 - Business Administration. General ; M11 - Production Management ; M12 - Personnel Management ; M14 - Corporate Culture; Social Responsibility ; K2 - Regulation and Business Law ; K42 - Illegal Behavior and the Enforcement of Law