This document summarizes a book called "Making the World Work Better" about IBM's evolution over the past 100 years. The book was written by three journalists and examines how IBM contributed to technology advances and shaped the modern corporation through innovations in its workforce, social responsibility practices, and global engagement. It also explores IBM's big bets that impacted society through enabling systems like Social Security and advances in banking, space travel, and more. The lessons highlight that to survive over the long term, a company must continually transform while guided by enduring values and a clear identity.
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Ibm100 - Book
This document summarizes a book called "Making the World Work Better" about IBM's evolution over the past 100 years. The book was written by three journalists and examines how IBM contributed to technology advances and shaped the modern corporation through innovations in its workforce, social responsibility practices, and global engagement. It also explores IBM's big bets that impacted society through enabling systems like Social Security and advances in banking, space travel, and more. The lessons highlight that to survive over the long term, a company must continually transform while guided by enduring values and a clear identity.
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One hundred years ago, the
company that would become
IBM took its first step into an unknown future. In Making the World Work Better, three accomplished journalists tell a story of progress that illuminates, and transcends, the rich story of a single enterprise. BOOK DETAI LS Published by: IBM / Pearson Page Count: 352 ISBN13: 978-0-13-275510-8 In Making the World Work Better: The Ideas That Shaped a Century and a Company, journalists Kevin Maney, Steve Hamm and Jeffrey M. OBrien examine how IBM has contributed to the evolution of technology and the modern corporation over the past 100 years. The authors offer a fresh analysis, as well as interviews of many key figures and rich archival photographs and drawings. The book captures triumphs, missteps and moments of high dramafrom the bet-the-business gamble on the Making the World Work Better The Ideas that Shaped a Century and a Company ISBN10: 0-13-275510-6 legendary System/360 in the 1960s, to the turnaround of the 1990s, to the new frontiers of a smarter planet. The authors have shaped a narrative of discoveries, struggles, individual insights and lasting impact on technology, business and society. Taken together, their essays reveal a distinctive mindset and organizational culture, animated by a deeply held commitment to the hard work of progress. Making the World Work Better provides a deep dive into many of the achievements celebrated in IBMs Icons of Progress: It shows how IBM engineers and scientists invented many of the building blocks of modern information technology, including the memory chip, the mainframe, the personal computer and even new fields of mathematics. This story points to the future of science, and of thinking itself. We learn how IBMs business innovations-from progressive workforce policies, to new ideas of societal responsibility, to global engagement, to the deliberate creation of corporate cultureshaped the modern corporation. We also see how IBMs big betsincluding enablement of the US Social Security System, space travel, modern banking and moremade a lasting impact on our world, and laid out a path to progress the company is still pursuing today. The lessons for all businesses and institutions are powerful: To survive and succeed over a long period, you have to be willing and able to continually transform, guided by enduring values and a broadly understood identity. Over a century of change, IBM came into being, grew, went global, nearly died, transformed itself and is now charting a new path forward, embracing a second century that bids to be even more surprising than its first. PREVI EW THE BOOK AND VI EW AUTHOR DI SCUSSI ONS Steve Hamm has been a journalist for 30 years. Before joining IBMs corporate communications department as a writer and videographer, he was a senior writer at BusinessWeek and spent two decades covering the computer industry, first in Silicon Valley and then in New York. He is the author of Bangalore Tiger and The Race for Perfect. He lives in Pelham, New York, with his wife and son. Steve Hamm Kevin Maney Jeffrey M. O'Brien About the Authors: 01 /12