_
RobertoLofaro.com - Knowledge Portal - human-generated content
Change, with and without technology
for updates on publications, follow @robertolofaro on Instagram or @changerulebook on Twitter, you can also support on Patreon or subscribe on YouTube


_

You are here: Home > Suggested readings > Marsh - Fabbricare il futuro - ISBN 8875784094 - 3.5/5

Viewed 2612 times | words: 352
Published on 2018-04-26 09:50:09 | words: 352

References


Marsh, Peter
Fabbricare il futuro. La nuova rivoluzione industriale
BookID 116124344
ISBN 8875784094
(see LibraryThing.com card)
Description (from Amazon)---
My review: 3.5/5An interesting book that I read as part of my update on manufacturing/quality/logistics, and that refers to many books that I read a couple of decades ago on the same subjects (including of course Womack's "The machine that...")- with a business aim not in manufacturing, but in services (at the time, specifically banking and outsourcing).

The most interesting part of this book is that, despite the title (in English, closer to the content- in Italian, misleading) focused on manufacturing, is worth reading for anybody (in private or public business, i.e. including politics and non-profit) to understand how the business environment changes over the last few centuries- and how that impacted on everyday life- including on social relationships.

Probably, you can complement it with other books from the bibliography (i.e. if you are focus on business, have a look at the Schoberger book listed within the bibliography, but reading reports from the IMF, OECD, and IBRD/World Bank spanning a few years would give you a feeling of the evoution).

I wish that some of my more technology-oriented friends and colleagues read at least the introduction (chapter 1) and the chapters on social organization (e.g. 4, 5, 8)

As for my non-technological friends: read the same chapters, to have a better understanding on what is "under the hood" in a complex society

It could also be interesting if read before (not after, as I did) Piketty's "XXI century"- to add some context to number crunching that is often a quest stretching data to fit a theory
Outline material: No outline material yet shared