Planning Review: Volume 11 Issue 6
Table of contents
TRW's balancing act
John ThackrayIn many ways TRW is the prototypical modern U.S. multinational. The exceptional difference is that in recent years it has wrestled with the problems of managing scale and…
Some observations on industrial policy
Lawrence ChimerineProposals to create a formal, comprehensive U.S. industrial policy are now receiving wide attention in Washington and in the press. Moreover, the continued relatively weak…
Introducing planning in an entrepreneurial firm: A case study
Leon ReinharthTen years ago John Kenneth Galbraith popularized the notion of the dual nature of the U.S. economy. A small portion of one percent of all business units in the United States own…
What business strategy for this recovery?
Donald McLagan, Robert GoughAlthough this autumn sees the recovery of the economy well underway, the form this upswing is taking is very different from previous ones. The recession of the early 1980s has…
Linking business and Human Resource strategy
Lance A. Berger, Harold E. GlassThe recent lessons of the recession have taught human resources planners to think about controlling people costs before their companies get pinched by a sluggish economy. To do…
Systematic political analysis for planners
William D. Coplin, Michael K. O'LearyCorporate planners rarely incorporate political analysis into the planning process in the same systematic way that they include traditional business factors. Nevertheless, top…