by George David Smith (Author)
When Charles Martin Hall patented the process for refining the metal in 1886, it was far from self-evident that the new technology would be a business success. Problems involving the technology had to be solved. Capital and a labour force were needed. The most pressing entrepreneurial dilemma was the need to develop markets for what was then a novelty product. George David Smith examines how Alcoa met these problems, with special attention to innovation, from Alcoa's beginnings through its development into one of the most successful monopolies in American history. By World War II, no other American corporation had developed its industry's markets more dramatically and then dominated them more completely. The book then analyzes the undoing of Alcoa's monopoly by war and antitrust, and examines how the firm adapted to evolving forms of oliogopolistic and global competition.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 592
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 26 Aug 1988
ISBN 10: 0521352614
ISBN 13: 9780521352611
Book Overview: A history of the aluminium giant Alcoa, which became one of America's most successful monopolies.