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Jim CollinsA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
As Collins and his team compiled the list of good-to-great companies, they needed to contextualize their research by using apt comparisons. According to Collins, these direct comparisons “were in the same industry as the good-to-great companies with the same opportunities and similar resources at the time of transition, but [...] showed no leap from good to great” (8). Some of the most notable examples include the comparison between Wells Fargo (good-to-great) and Bank of America (direct comparison), Fannie Mae (good-to-great) and Great Western (direct comparison), and Kroger (good-to-great) and A & P (direct comparison). Without researching the performance of these direct comparison companies, Collins and his team would have been limited in their ability to draw conclusions about what made the good-to-great companies’ accomplishments so spectacular.
Here are the 11 direct comparison companies Collins cites as having met his search team’s criteria: Upjohn, Silo, Great Western, Warner-Lambert, Scott Paper, A&P, Bethlehem Steel, R.J. Reynolds, Addressograph, Eckerd, and Bank of America.
In companies that were not able to sustain the good-to-great transition, Collins and his research team identified a pattern they called the “doom loop.” These companies became trapped in a vicious cycle characterized by the four following steps: disappointing results; reaction without understanding; new direction, program, leader, event, fad, or acquisition; no build-up and thus no accelerated momentum.
By Jim Collins