You Can't Save 80 Million Filipinos! But You Can Build Me a Park
Product Code:
9789715391221
ISBN13:
9789715391221
Condition:
New
$19.02
Matthias Mendezona is a prize-winning poet and accomplished author of a personal memoir "How Sweet the Mango, No?" but he now co-authors a book with his late friend and business associate Roberto "Bobby" Aboitiz, with the intriguing title, "You Can't Save 80 Million Filipinos, but You Can Build Me a Park." In this pithy tome, Mendezona recounts the experience of working together with the Aboitiz family (an influential Filipino business clan based in the central Philippine province of Cebu) and a Japanese partner to build what would become one of the biggest ship-building sites in the region. The book is valuable from several perspectives-as a personal memoir relating the difficulties of establishing a greenfields industry in a developing country with its peculiar hydra of tradition, politics, bureaucracy, corruption etc. while raising one's family and building one's own career; as a case study which could be taken up in a business school; and the detailed observation of dealing with the many factors and varied role-players involved in the transformation of an underdeveloped town into a competitive global role-player in the shipping industry. With a modern approach of including telling and relevant personal e-mails, detailing ruminations on the factors which keep a country uncompetitive in a global economy, recording poignant moments of struggling towards success while grappling with social and even personal problems, the book could have a broad audience of Filipinos and foreigners alike as well as businessmen, investors and laymen.
Author: Matthias "bube" G Mendezona |
Publisher: University of San Carlos Press |
Publication Date: Feb 14, 2018 |
Number of Pages: 142 pages |
Language: English |
Binding: Paperback |
ISBN-10: 9715391222 |
ISBN-13: 9789715391221 |
You Can't Save 80 Million Filipinos! But You Can Build Me a Park
$19.02
Matthias Mendezona is a prize-winning poet and accomplished author of a personal memoir "How Sweet the Mango, No?" but he now co-authors a book with his late friend and business associate Roberto "Bobby" Aboitiz, with the intriguing title, "You Can't Save 80 Million Filipinos, but You Can Build Me a Park." In this pithy tome, Mendezona recounts the experience of working together with the Aboitiz family (an influential Filipino business clan based in the central Philippine province of Cebu) and a Japanese partner to build what would become one of the biggest ship-building sites in the region. The book is valuable from several perspectives-as a personal memoir relating the difficulties of establishing a greenfields industry in a developing country with its peculiar hydra of tradition, politics, bureaucracy, corruption etc. while raising one's family and building one's own career; as a case study which could be taken up in a business school; and the detailed observation of dealing with the many factors and varied role-players involved in the transformation of an underdeveloped town into a competitive global role-player in the shipping industry. With a modern approach of including telling and relevant personal e-mails, detailing ruminations on the factors which keep a country uncompetitive in a global economy, recording poignant moments of struggling towards success while grappling with social and even personal problems, the book could have a broad audience of Filipinos and foreigners alike as well as businessmen, investors and laymen.
Author: Matthias "bube" G Mendezona |
Publisher: University of San Carlos Press |
Publication Date: Feb 14, 2018 |
Number of Pages: 142 pages |
Language: English |
Binding: Paperback |
ISBN-10: 9715391222 |
ISBN-13: 9789715391221 |