- Gebundenes Buch
 
- Merkliste
 - Auf die Merkliste
 - Bewerten Bewerten
 - Teilen
 - Produkt teilen
 - Produkterinnerung
 - Produkterinnerung
 
Many companies that stray too far from their core business fail. So how is it that General Electric, a major electrical manufacturing company, ended up as one of the top U.S. chemical producers with 1998 sales of $6. 6 billion? In Unlikely Victory, Jerome T.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Paul D BalmertStudy Guide for Alive and Well at the End of the Day18,99 €
Daniel PetersenHuman Error Reduction and Safety Management173,99 €
Milton J TerrellSafety and Health Management in the Nineties173,99 €
Thomas D SchneidModern Safety and Resource Control Management173,99 €
Thomas R KrauseLeading with Safety112,99 €
Thomas R KrauseThe Behavior-Based Safety Process200,99 €
Carol Bayly GrantWorkplace Wellness123,99 €- 				
 - 				
 - 				
 
					
					Many companies that stray too far from their core business fail. So how is it that General Electric, a major electrical manufacturing company, ended up as one of the top U.S. chemical producers with 1998 sales of $6. 6 billion? In Unlikely Victory, Jerome T.				
				Produktdetails
					- Produktdetails
 - Verlag: Wiley
 - Seitenzahl: 219
 - Erscheinungstermin: 15. September 2000
 - Englisch
 - Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
 - Gewicht: 431g
 - ISBN-13: 9780816908196
 - ISBN-10: 0816908192
 - Artikelnr.: 24519599
 
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
 - Libri GmbH
 - Europaallee 1
 - 36244 Bad Hersfeld
 - gpsr@libri.de
 
- Verlag: Wiley
 - Seitenzahl: 219
 - Erscheinungstermin: 15. September 2000
 - Englisch
 - Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
 - Gewicht: 431g
 - ISBN-13: 9780816908196
 - ISBN-10: 0816908192
 - Artikelnr.: 24519599
 
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
 - Libri GmbH
 - Europaallee 1
 - 36244 Bad Hersfeld
 - gpsr@libri.de
 
Jerome T. Coe is the author of Unlikely Victory: How General Electric Succeeded in the Chemical Industry, published by Wiley.
	Preface v
Acknowledgments ix
1. What's General Electric Doing in the Chemical Business? 1
2. Early Years of GE Chemistry 1900 - 1948 9
Electrical Insulation; Silicones; GE Forms a Chemical Division
3. GE Silicones: 1940 - 1964 27
Forms Shaky Start to Successful Business
4. Loctite 45
An Invention that Got Away
5. Synthetic Diamond 49
GE Break-Through Caps Two Centuries of Research
6. Lexan Polycarbonate: 1953 - 1968 69
The "Unbreakable" Thermoplastic
7. Noryl Thermoplastic: 1956 - 1968 83
Victory Snatched from Jaws of Defeat
8. GE Engineering Plastics: 1968 - 1987 91
Headlong Growth to World Leadership
9. Growth by Means of a Major Acquisition: 1988 - 1991 113
ABS Plastics Up for Bid; A New Polycarbonate Process
10. Laminates and Insulating Materials 123
GE Core-businesses Decline in Importance
11. GE Silicones: 1965 - 1998 139
Sealants Leadership; Word Participation
12. GE Engineering Plastics: 1992 - 1998 139
After Recession, Growth Resumes
13. People Make the Difference 159
Four Scientist: Eugene G. Rochow, H. Tracy Hill and the GE Diamond Research
Team, Daniel W. Fox, Allan S. Hay.
Five Managers: Abraham L. Marshall, Charles E. Reed, John F. Wells, Jr.,
Glen H. Hiner, Gary L. Rogers
14. Summation 178
How Big an Achievement? How Attained? Nine Strategies
Glossary 195
A. Thermoplastic Polymers, Compounds, and Blends 195
B. Trade-names, Companies, and Chemical Terms 196
C. GE Organization Notes 199
Chapter References 201
Names Index 211
Subject Index 215
	Acknowledgments ix
1. What's General Electric Doing in the Chemical Business? 1
2. Early Years of GE Chemistry 1900 - 1948 9
Electrical Insulation; Silicones; GE Forms a Chemical Division
3. GE Silicones: 1940 - 1964 27
Forms Shaky Start to Successful Business
4. Loctite 45
An Invention that Got Away
5. Synthetic Diamond 49
GE Break-Through Caps Two Centuries of Research
6. Lexan Polycarbonate: 1953 - 1968 69
The "Unbreakable" Thermoplastic
7. Noryl Thermoplastic: 1956 - 1968 83
Victory Snatched from Jaws of Defeat
8. GE Engineering Plastics: 1968 - 1987 91
Headlong Growth to World Leadership
9. Growth by Means of a Major Acquisition: 1988 - 1991 113
ABS Plastics Up for Bid; A New Polycarbonate Process
10. Laminates and Insulating Materials 123
GE Core-businesses Decline in Importance
11. GE Silicones: 1965 - 1998 139
Sealants Leadership; Word Participation
12. GE Engineering Plastics: 1992 - 1998 139
After Recession, Growth Resumes
13. People Make the Difference 159
Four Scientist: Eugene G. Rochow, H. Tracy Hill and the GE Diamond Research
Team, Daniel W. Fox, Allan S. Hay.
Five Managers: Abraham L. Marshall, Charles E. Reed, John F. Wells, Jr.,
Glen H. Hiner, Gary L. Rogers
14. Summation 178
How Big an Achievement? How Attained? Nine Strategies
Glossary 195
A. Thermoplastic Polymers, Compounds, and Blends 195
B. Trade-names, Companies, and Chemical Terms 196
C. GE Organization Notes 199
Chapter References 201
Names Index 211
Subject Index 215
Preface v
Acknowledgments ix
1. What's General Electric Doing in the Chemical Business? 1
2. Early Years of GE Chemistry 1900 - 1948 9
Electrical Insulation; Silicones; GE Forms a Chemical Division
3. GE Silicones: 1940 - 1964 27
Forms Shaky Start to Successful Business
4. Loctite 45
An Invention that Got Away
5. Synthetic Diamond 49
GE Break-Through Caps Two Centuries of Research
6. Lexan Polycarbonate: 1953 - 1968 69
The "Unbreakable" Thermoplastic
7. Noryl Thermoplastic: 1956 - 1968 83
Victory Snatched from Jaws of Defeat
8. GE Engineering Plastics: 1968 - 1987 91
Headlong Growth to World Leadership
9. Growth by Means of a Major Acquisition: 1988 - 1991 113
ABS Plastics Up for Bid; A New Polycarbonate Process
10. Laminates and Insulating Materials 123
GE Core-businesses Decline in Importance
11. GE Silicones: 1965 - 1998 139
Sealants Leadership; Word Participation
12. GE Engineering Plastics: 1992 - 1998 139
After Recession, Growth Resumes
13. People Make the Difference 159
Four Scientist: Eugene G. Rochow, H. Tracy Hill and the GE Diamond Research
Team, Daniel W. Fox, Allan S. Hay.
Five Managers: Abraham L. Marshall, Charles E. Reed, John F. Wells, Jr.,
Glen H. Hiner, Gary L. Rogers
14. Summation 178
How Big an Achievement? How Attained? Nine Strategies
Glossary 195
A. Thermoplastic Polymers, Compounds, and Blends 195
B. Trade-names, Companies, and Chemical Terms 196
C. GE Organization Notes 199
Chapter References 201
Names Index 211
Subject Index 215
				Acknowledgments ix
1. What's General Electric Doing in the Chemical Business? 1
2. Early Years of GE Chemistry 1900 - 1948 9
Electrical Insulation; Silicones; GE Forms a Chemical Division
3. GE Silicones: 1940 - 1964 27
Forms Shaky Start to Successful Business
4. Loctite 45
An Invention that Got Away
5. Synthetic Diamond 49
GE Break-Through Caps Two Centuries of Research
6. Lexan Polycarbonate: 1953 - 1968 69
The "Unbreakable" Thermoplastic
7. Noryl Thermoplastic: 1956 - 1968 83
Victory Snatched from Jaws of Defeat
8. GE Engineering Plastics: 1968 - 1987 91
Headlong Growth to World Leadership
9. Growth by Means of a Major Acquisition: 1988 - 1991 113
ABS Plastics Up for Bid; A New Polycarbonate Process
10. Laminates and Insulating Materials 123
GE Core-businesses Decline in Importance
11. GE Silicones: 1965 - 1998 139
Sealants Leadership; Word Participation
12. GE Engineering Plastics: 1992 - 1998 139
After Recession, Growth Resumes
13. People Make the Difference 159
Four Scientist: Eugene G. Rochow, H. Tracy Hill and the GE Diamond Research
Team, Daniel W. Fox, Allan S. Hay.
Five Managers: Abraham L. Marshall, Charles E. Reed, John F. Wells, Jr.,
Glen H. Hiner, Gary L. Rogers
14. Summation 178
How Big an Achievement? How Attained? Nine Strategies
Glossary 195
A. Thermoplastic Polymers, Compounds, and Blends 195
B. Trade-names, Companies, and Chemical Terms 196
C. GE Organization Notes 199
Chapter References 201
Names Index 211
Subject Index 215







