Making the World Work Better
The Ideas That Shaped a Century and a Company
Thomas J Watson Sr’s motto for IBM was THINK, and for more than a
century, that one little word worked overtime.
In Making the World Work Better: The Ideas That Shaped a Century and a Company,
journalists Kevin Maney, Steve Hamm, and Jeffrey M. O’Brien mark the Centennial of
IBM’s founding by examining how IBM has distinctly contributed to the evolution of
technology and the modern corporation over the past 100 years.
The authors offer a fresh analysis through interviews of many key figures, chronicling
the Nobel Prize-winning work of the company’s research laboratories and uncovering rich
archival material, including hundreds of vintage photographs and drawings. The book
recounts the company’s missteps, as well as its successes. It captures moments of high
drama – from the bet-the-business gamble on the legendary System/360 in the 1960s to the
turnaround from the company’s near-death experience in the early 1990s.
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. IBM engineers and scientists invented many of the building
blocks of modern information technology, including the memory chip, the disk drive, the
scanning tunneling microscope (essential to nanotechnology) and even new fields of
mathematics. IBM brought the punch-card tabulator, the mainframe and the personal computer
into the mainstream of business and modern life. IBM was the first large American company
to pay all employees salaries rather than hourly wages, an early champion of hiring women
and minorities and a pioneer of new approaches to doing business--with its model of the
globally integrated enterprise. And it has had a lasting impact on the course of society
from enabling the US Social Security System, to the space program, to airline
reservations, modern banking and retail, to many of the ways our world today works.
The lessons for all businesses – indeed, all institutions – are powerful:
To survive and succeed over a long period, you have to anticipate change and to be willing
and able to continually transform. But while change happens, progress is deliberate. IBM
– deliberately led by a pioneering culture and grounded in a set of core ideas – came
into being, grew, thrived, nearly died, transformed itself… and is now charting a new
path forward for its second century toward a perhaps surprising future on a planetary
scale.
Table of Contents
Foreword: Of Change and Progress
Chapter 1 Pioneering the Science of Information
Chapter 2 Reinventing the Modern Corporation
Chapter 3 Making the World Work Better
Acknowledgements
About the Authors
Endnotes
350 pages, Paperback