The Corporate Prince
by
Book Details
About the Book
For almost 500 years, political leaders throughout the world have obtained invaluable insights into human nature and sage advice on getting and keeping power from Niccolo Machiavelli’s classic handbook on statecraft: The Prince. Now, in The Corporate Prince, Machiavelli’s timeless wisdom is adapted for our modern business leaders. The Corporate Prince faithfully follows the organization of The Prince and includes virtually all of Machiavelli's controversial advice and observations. However, the setting has been changed to the modern business world, and illustrative anecdotes from the world of business have been substituted for Machiavelli's anecdotes about princes of old.
About the Author
Prior
to my retirement in 1995, I was a staff officer at the National Research
Council, the operating arm of the National Academy of Sciences, a
congressionally chartered, private, nonprofit corporation located in
Washington, D.C.
During
most of my 33 years with the research council I managed a federally funded
program that helped federal agencies solve problems related to their
construction activities. As director of
that program, I coordinated a wide variety of studies that dealt with various
aspects of building technology and construction management and published more
than 150 technical reports.
Before
joining the research council, I worked for Westinghouse Electric Corporation in
Baltimore and elsewhere as a manufacturing engineer, and prior to that, I
served three years in the U.S. Air Force as a navigator.
My
decision to write The Corporate Prince
was prompted by my dual interests in Niccolo Machiavelli and business
management. My interest in Machiavelli
was stimulated more than 25 years ago when I read Robert Crichton’s
best-selling novel, The Secret of Santa
Vittoria, in which the hero uses his knowledge of Machiavelli to thwart the
efforts of the Germans to confiscate his village’s wine during World War
II. Prompted by the novel, I began
reading Machiavelli, and I soon concluded that he is misunderstood and
underappreciated by the modern world.
In fact, I became convinced that Machiavelli is not the personification
of evil, as many believe, but rather is one of the true geniuses of the Italian
renaissance and that his books, and especially his masterpiece, The Prince, are packed with priceless
wisdom and timeless insights into human nature that are as valid today as when
they were written almost 500 years ago.
My
interest in business management dates back even further than my interest in
Machiavelli. Although I was trained as
an engineer, I learned early in my career that engineering is not where the
real action is and that engineers, even brilliant engineers, have no impact
unless their work is organized and focused on a commercial or societal
goal. I discovered that while engineers
are often crucial to the success of an enterprise, they are, inevitably, just
one member of a team. The really
important players are the people who organize and direct the team in other
words, CEOs and senior managers. My
appreciation of the overriding importance of top management to the success of
an organization was reinforced during my three decades on the staff of the National
Research Council. Although the studies
we undertook dealt mostly with scientific or technical concerns of the federal
agencies, I usually discovered, after analyzing a problem, that the root cause
of the difficulty was not technical at all, but rather could be traced either
to a statutory requirement imposed by Congress or an administrative policy
adopted by agency administrators.
Thus,
out of necessity as well as fascination with the subject, I became an avid, if
informal, student of business management and the administration of large organizations. (I have probably attended as many courses
and seminars and read as many books on the subject as most masters of business
administration.) And, as a result of my
study, I developed great sympathy and respect for the people who accept responsibility
for leading large enterprises.
Following
my retirement it occurred to me that I could combine my dual interests in
Machiavelli and business management and contribute to the literature by
adapting The Prince for business
leaders. The Corporate Prince is the result.
I hold a bachelor of mechanical engineering
degree from The Catholic University of America. While employed I was a registered professional engineer in the
District of Columbia and a member of two engineering societies. I have served on many professional
committees and have given numerous talks on construction-related matters.