
Joe Wilson and the Creation of Xerox
By: Charles D. Ellis, Anne M. Mulcahy (Introduction by), Joel M. Podolny (Foreword by)
Hardcover | 25 August 2006 | Edition Number 1
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432 Pages
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Xerox and xerography are not only a part of our vocabulary, but part of our everyday life. Charley Ellis gives the reader a poignant understanding of just how this happened through the life, adventures, critical business decisions, and dreams of Joseph Wilson and a cadre of remarkable individuals.
This book will surely join the library of memorable biographies that capture the building of America into a risk-tolerant, technologically sophisticated, idea-oriented society that thrives by understanding what Charles Darwin really said:
'Survival will be neither to the strongest of the species, nor to the most intelligent, but to those most adaptable to change.'"
-Frederick Frank, Vice Chairman, Lehman Brothers Inc.
Industry Reviews
If you run a business and aspire to make it great, you owe it to
yourself to read Joe Wilson and the Creation of Xerox by
Charles D. Ellis. Despite occasionally pedestrian writing, the book
rewards the reader with dramatic accounts of how one great leader
managed to influence change rather than just react to it.
Wilson knew little about technology, yet he--not the brilliant
techies with whom he surrounded himself--created the modern copier
industry. Xerox was an old Rochester, N.Y., company that was
small, obscure and unambitious until Wilson took over from his dad
in the late 1940s. In a sense, his takeover kicked off the
technology revolution that shook American industry out of its
somnolence. Early investors with small stakes in Xerox became
multimillionaires. Later investors lost billions looking for the
"next Xerox." They would have done better searching for the next
Joe Wilson.
His tact and lack of ego held together a necessarily diverse bunch
of people. Sol Linowitz, the company lawyer, upstaged him by
letting it be said on national television that he, not Wilson, was
the father of Xerox. Wilson ignored it: Linowitz was important to
the company, and Wilson wanted success, not an ego massage. He
grasped the importance of image. He pioneered new and novel ways to
get public attention for Xerox, including backing public-service TV
shows at a time when the company could barely afford the expense in
order to convey an image of quality for a little-known brand.
When a leading consulting firm told Xerox there was no real market
for its proposed 412 xerography machine, Wilson and his aides took
the report apart and discovered that the questions asked and the
methodology were faulty. He plowed on.
The 412, Xerox's first truly competitive product, would have to
sell for $47,000 and was far too big for salespeople to lug around.
Who would, or could, write a check of this size for a mere copying
machine? But hey, someone suggested, who wouldn't pay a nickel to
get rid of the messy carbon copy that was the curse of every office
at the time? Wilson didn't hesitate: a nickel a copy it would be.
Customers loved the seemingly cheap price, and orders mounted and
remounted for the 412. To the customer's surprise and Xerox's
delight, users were making far more copies of things than they did
before the 412. The machine was so clean, fast and precise, it was
an easy way to expand internal communication in the days before
e-mail. In a year, some customers were spending more for copies
than the machine would have cost. Xerox became a cash jackpot
machine.
Ellis's generally upbeat book has a sad ending. On his retirement
in the mid-1960s, an ailing and tired Wilson made two horrible
mistakes: He picked an incompetent successor and then failed to
bequeath a strong board that could have reined in his successor's
blunders. His successor threw away the chance to own the coming
personal computer revolution and made disastrous billion-dollar
investments in old industries. He lacked his predecessor's knack
for embracing change. By then, Wilson was too ill to retake the
reins. Xerox shriveled, and its bonds sank to junk status. Rescued
by the present CEO, Ann Mulcahy, Xerox is doing well again, but it
is no longer the shining symbol Wilson created.
The author, Charley Ellis, is retired head of the consulting firm
Greenwich Associates and serves as a Yale trustee and a director of
the Vanguard funds. He knows a lot about business leadership,
having consulted for and worked with many of the best
practitioners. Among all of the business leaders he's known, and
he's known hundreds, he puts Joe Wilson--whom he never met--over
them all. The lessons here are clear and shining--both the good and
the bad. (Forbes.com, October 25, 2006)
Transforming family-owned Haloid Corp., which struggled in the shadow of hometown behemoth Eastman Kodak, into the globally recognized Xerox is an amazing accomplishment. But as Ellis's biography of Joe Wilson attests, Wilson's achievements ranged more widely and went much deeper than many gave him credit for. Ellis, author of 11 books and former financial industry consultant offers a heartfelt, if not artful, telling of the CEO's life story. He contends that Wilson embodied all of the qualities that leadership management books celebrate: integrity, foresight and the ability to inspire people to perform. He credits these attributes to helping Wilson so spectacularly realize his vision for his company; its employees; his alma mater, the University of Rochester; and the city and people of Rochester, N.Y. Ellis's telling starts off slow and is initially quite repetitive. But once Xerox is finally born, after years of setbacks, the story picks up. The real purpose for the detailed buildup appears toward the end, when credit for the last 20-odd years of corporate strife and ultimate success is given to the wrong person, Wilson's best friend and the company's corporate counsel. At that point, it becomes clear why Ellis was compelled to write this book so long after the company's rise and its true founder's demise.(Sept.) (Publishers Weekly, July 17, 2006)
Introduction by Anne M. Mulcahy, Chairman and CEO of Xerox Corporation ix
Foreword by Joel Podolny, Dean, Yale School of Management xv
1 Early Years 1
2 Peggy 13
3 The Thirties 19
4 Years of Struggle 29
5 Chet Carlson 39
6 Battelle 51
7 Contact—Just Barely 57
8 Sol Linowitz 67
9 Toward Xerox 79
10 The University 97
11 Worst of Times, Best of Times 111
12 Joe Wilson 131
13 IBM, RCA, and GE 135
14 Gathering Strength in Finance 147
15 Building the Organization 157
16 Going International 177
17 Going It Alone 191
18 5¢ 199
19 The 914 209
20 Go! 225
21 Getting on Message 239
22 Xerox: Zoom-Zoom 259
23 Fuji-Xerox 267
24 Challenges of Success 275
25 Minister Florence 289
26 Life 301
27 Public Service 315
28 Winding Down 325
29 No Longer CEO 337
30 At the Rockefellers’ 353
Afterword 359
Joe Wilson: In His Own Words 371
Acknowledgments 377
Index 381
ISBN: 9780471998358
ISBN-10: 0471998354
Published: 25th August 2006
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number of Pages: 432
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc (US)
Country of Publication: US
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 23.67 x 16.05 x 3.61
Weight (kg): 0.65
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