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Corporate Cults: The Insidious Lure of the All-Consuming Organization

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Title: Corporate Cults: The Insidious Lure of the All-Consuming Organization
by Dave Arnott
ISBN: 0-8144-0493-6
Publisher: American Management Association
Pub. Date: 01 October, 1999
Format: Hardcover
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $23.95
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Average Customer Rating: 3.29 (7 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: "What I can do for you...."
Comment: The image of the tattoo on the man's head was a little radical for me, and I have to say that it took a while to even pick this book up. I'm very glad I did, however. I noticed that a previous reviewer (or two) became very defensive in their explanation of what a wonderful situation it is to belong to a corporate cult. Like the frog, enjoying the warm water, but slowly boiled after gradual temperature increase, you poor people never even saw it coming. Of course the company provides everything you could possibly need. Of course they reward you for five, ten and fifteen years perfect attendance. Why ever leave the property, when you have a place to eat, take your children, exercise (and yes, even sleep). The joke on the "team" I worked was that we only went home to change clothes. That could be addressed as well, with lockers in the fitness center. Eventually, your entire life is with the company, and this is the danger. Work needs to stay at work, and home at home. When the lines are blurred, I guarantee your life will fall apart. Depend upon it. You may have met your spouse there, take your kids to daycare there, have breakfast and lunch with all your friends there, but at some point, you will realize the high price you've paid. They are taking care of business, not you. They really do not care about you at all. When you retire after 40 years of service while holding your pencil set engraved with the corporate emblem, the question I want you to ask yourself is this: Were the trinkets and certificates worth it? Are you a better person for sacrificing your whole life to show your loyalty and thankfulness? Did all your bowing and scraping pay off? Have you realized your full potential at the expense of your marriage, your children and your sanity (...Although they did come through on hospitalization costs after your nervous breakdown.)? Did you make the right decision?

Rating: 1
Summary: jealous wannabe
Comment: This is written by someone who has obviously never felt the thrill of being successful and satisfied in a job. Corporations need to provide environments where individuals can be the best they can be, while advancing their own personal as well as the corporation's goals. This guy would have us all working in cubicles with institutional green on the walls, and 10 minute pee breaks at scheduled intervals. Professor of Management? My corporation ain't gonna consult with him.

Rating: 3
Summary: You say that as if it were a bad thing
Comment: The cover of this book doesn't really seem to go with the content. The author obviously wants to worry people, to make them aware that Western culture's idea of you=your job is a bad thing. And I agree. This isn't a fault that corporate America has imposed on the world; this is the market adapting to existing societal conditions. People don't live in the same house or same neighborhood all their lives, so they don't develop relationships with their neighbors. Churches are having trouble finding and keeping members. Society values work over these things, so it isn't too surprising when employers begin to fill the needs that are not being met in the workers' personal lives. I, personally, would love to work for an employer who actually cared about my well-being and valued my hard work enough to supply a gym, child care, visiting massage therapists, etc. The author's cause-and-effect theory on this phenomena seems backwards from the reality of life.

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