ISBN: 9781603580007 Year Added to Catalog: 2008 Book Format: Paperback Book Art: Photo insert Dimensions: 6x9 Number of Pages: 352 Book Publisher: Chelsea Green Publishing Release Date: September 10, 2008 Web Product ID: 418
Also By This Author
Companies We Keep
Employee Ownership and the Business of Community and Place
"Abrams' work is a compelling and celebratory reminder that
companies like South Mountain are desperately needed in a time of
real estate boom and inevitable bust and the ruins left in their wake."
—Jeff Biggers, The Bloomsbury Review
Part memoir and part examination of a new business model, the 2005 release of The Company We Keep marked the debut of an important new voice in the literature of American business. Now, in Companies We Keep, the revised and expanded edition of his 2005 work, John Abrams further develops his idea that companies flourish when they become centers of interdependence, or “communities of enterprise.”
Thoroughly revised with an expanded focus on employee ownership and workplace democracy, Companies We Keep celebrates the idea that when employees share in the rewards as well as the responsibility for the decisions they make, better decisions result. This is an especially timely topic. Most of the baby boomer generation—the owners of millions of American businesses— will retire within the next two decades. In 2001, 50,000 businesses changed hands. In 2005, that number rose to 350,000. Projections call for 750,000 ownership transitions in 2009. Employee ownership—in both the philosophical and the practical sense—is gathering steam as businesses change hands, and Abrams examines some of the many ways this is done.
Companies We Keep is structured around eight principles—from “Sharing Ownership” and “Cultivating Workplace Democracy” to “Thinking Like Cathedral Builders” and “Committing to the Business of Place”—that Abrams has discovered in the 32 years since he cofounded South Mountain Company on the island of Martha’s Vineyard. Together, these principles reveal communities of enterprise as a potent force of change that can—and will— improve the way Americans do business.
About the Author
John Abrams
"We think about our work as the cathedral builders thought about theirs. We try to think for generations, as we try to design and build for generations." These are the words of John Abrams, co-founder and president of South Mountain Company, an employee-owned design, building, and renewable energy company committed to responsible business practice. Started by the seat of the pants in 1975, today South Mountain has annual revenues of $9 million and 17 owners among its 33 employees. In 2005 Business Ethics Magazine awarded South Mountain its National Award for Workplace Democracy.