Books > Business & Economics > Business & management
|
Buy Now
House of Plenty - The Rise, Fall, and Revival of Luby's Cafeterias (Paperback)
Loot Price: R739
Discovery Miles 7 390
You Save: R53
(7%)
|
|
House of Plenty - The Rise, Fall, and Revival of Luby's Cafeterias (Paperback)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
Violet Crown Award, Writers League of Texas, 2007 Citation, San
Antonio Conservation Society, 2009 Scarred by the deaths of his
mother and sisters and the failure of his father's business, a
young man dreamed of making enough money to retire early and
retreat into the secure world that his childhood tragedies had torn
from him. But Harry Luby refused to be a robber baron. Turning
totally against the tide of avaricious capitalism, he determined to
make a fortune by doing good. Starting with that unlikely, even
naive, ambition in 1911, Harry Luby founded a cafeteria empire that
by the 1980s had revenues second only to McDonald's. So
successfully did Luby and his heirs satisfy the tastes of America
that Luby's became the country's largest cafeteria chain, creating
more millionaires per capita among its employees than any other
corporation of its size. Even more surprising, the company stayed
true to Harry Luby's vision for eight decades, making money by
treating its customers and employees exceptionally well. Written
with the sweep and drama of a novel, House of Plenty tells the
engrossing story of Luby's founding and phenomenal growth, its long
run as America's favorite family restaurant during the post-World
War II decades, its financial failure during the greed-driven 1990s
when non-family leadership jettisoned the company's proven business
model, and its recent struggle back to solvency. Carol Dawson and
Carol Johnston draw on insider stories and company records to
recapture the forces that propelled the company to its greatest
heights, including its unprecedented practices of allowing store
managers to keep 40 percent of net profits and issuing stock to all
employees, which allowed thousands of Luby's workers to achieve the
American dream of honestly earned prosperity. The authors also
plumb the depths of the Luby's drama, including a hushed-up theft
that split the family for decades; the 1991 mass shooting at the
Killeen Luby's, which splattered the company's good name across
headlines nationwide; and the rapacious over-expansion that more
than doubled the company's size in nine years (1987-1996), pushed
it into bankruptcy, and drove president and CEO John Edward Curtis
Jr. to violent suicide. Disproving F. Scott Fitzgerald's adage that
"there are no second acts in American lives," House of Plenty tells
the epic story of an iconic American institution that has risen,
fallen, and found redemption-with no curtain call in sight.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.