p.179
"The test of a Schumpeterian innovation is easy to apply at the level of the entrepreneur, and only a little harder for the firm. Students of business history are familiar with a long list of great innovators: Josiah Wedgwood and Richard Arkwright in the eighteenth century; Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, August Thyssen, and Alfred Nobel in the nineteenth; Henry Ford, Giovanni Agnelli, Estée Lauder, Akio Morita, and Sam Walton in the twentieth; Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson, and Toshifumi Suzuki in the late twentieth and early twenty-first. The same is true –for most of heir histories- of innovative twenty-first-century companies such as Microsoft, IKEA, Nokia, and Google. But by Schumpeter’s definition, all successful firms have been entrepreneurial at some moment in their histories, though a given company is certain to be more entrepreneurial at one point and less so at another. When their innovation dwindle, firms begin to die."
martes, julio 17, 2012
J.A. Schumpeter (desde su biografía - 6)
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