“There is a point of complexity beyond which a business is no longer manageable.”
Source: 1960s - 1980s, MANAGEMENT: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices (1973), Part 3, p. 681
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Peter F. Drucker180
American business consultant 1909–2005Related quotes
Vijay R. Singh (1931–2006) Fijian politician
Speaking Out (2006)
Bernie Ecclestone (1930) British business magnate
Financial Times. November 23, 2004
Bernie Ecclestone responding to the banks holding a trial to determine if he should continue controlling Formula One Holdings and its subsidiares including Formula One Management.
Salman Rushdie (1947) British Indian novelist and essayist
Address at Columbia University (1991)
Context: Ibn Rushd's ideas were silenced in their time. And throughout the Muslim world today, progressive ideas are in retreat. Actually Existing Islam reigns supreme, and just as the recently destroyed "Actually Existing Socialism" of the Soviet terror-state was horrifically unlike the utopia of peace and equality of which democratic socialists have dreamed, so also is Actually Existing Islam a force to which I have never given in, to which I cannot submit.
There is a point beyond which conciliation looks like capitulation. I do not believe I passed that point, but others have thought otherwise.
Dwight Waldo (1913–2000) American political scientist
Source: The Administrative State, 1948, p. 57 as cited in: Robert B. Denhardt, Thomas J. Catlaw (2014), Theories of Public Organization, p. 72
Ervin László (1932) Hungarian musician and philosopher
Source: Introduction to Systems Philosophy (1972), p. 15.
Rebecca Wirfs-Brock (1953) American software engineer
Source: Object-oriented design: a responsibility-driven approach (1989), p. 71
“The representatives of labor should have a voice in the management of the business.”
Charles Coughlin (1891–1979) Catholic priest, radio commentator
“Social Justice and A Living Wage” speech (Nov. 18, 1934) p. 27
A Series of Lectures on Social Justice, 1935
“Beyond a certain point there is no return. This point has to be reached.”
Franz Kafka book The Trial
5; variant translations:
From a certain point onward there is no longer any turning back. That is the point that must be reached.
As quoted in The Unfinished Country: A Book of American Symbols (1959) by Max Lerner, p. 452; also in Wait Without Idols (1964) by Gabriel Vahanian, p, 216; in Joyce, Decadence, and Emancipation (1995) by Vivian Heller, 39; in "The Sheltering Sky" (1949) by Paul Bowles, p. 213; and in the poem "Father and Son" by Delmore Schwartz.
There is a point of no return. This point has to be reached.
The Zürau Aphorisms (1917 - 1918)
Variant: From a certain point onward there is no longer any turning back. That is the point that must be reached.
Source: The Trial
Evsey Domar (1914–1997) American economist
Essays in the Theory of Economic Growth (1957)