The Essential Drucker (2001), by Peter Drucker.
Over a career that spanned nearly 60 years before he died in 2005 at age 95, Peter Drucker single-handedly invented the field of management theory. For most of the last half of the 20th century, he was the superstar CEO's go-to guru, counseling everyone from Alfred Sloan to Andy Grove. And not in the fuzzy-headed, inspirational, bromide-spouting guru sense you see today. Drucker had no time for discussing who moved your cheese, and his insights were distinctive for being simultaneously crystalline yet deeply contrarian — and, frequently, a generation ahead of their time. Just one example: He was talking about the rise and importance of "knowledge workers" in the 1970s, when the phrase was a good two decades from common parlance. With 30 books to choose from, it's probably best to start with The Essential Drucker, a potent 26-piece collection selected by Drucker himself in 2001 as a comprehensive representation of his life's work.
Note by uploader: The same book was uploaded by a PB user with username "Qwerty80". That book had non-readable formatting. It was without any headings, paragraphs, bullet points and anchor texts.
I've spent a whole day just to clean it up and make it readable. I want to thank "Qwerty80" for the availability of this book. It's a must read for anyone interested in Business, Economy, Sociology etc
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