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Hardcover Bill & Dave: How Hewlett and Packard Built the World's Greatest Company Book

ISBN: 1591841526

ISBN13: 9781591841524

Bill & Dave: How Hewlett and Packard Built the World's Greatest Company

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Book Overview

Michael Malone presents the definitive history of Hewlett-Packard and its legendary founders. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A "must read" for business leaders and technologists

This is a fascinating account of what is (or at least was) one of the most admired and respected companies, not just for its product reputation, but for its corporate culture and management style that was unique in its day, and copied by many others since. The book chronicles how Hewlett and Packard started a bare-bones company in a one-car garage with a single product and grew it into a multi-billion dollar global corporation. Malone looks at their childhood years and how their unique life experiences shaped their personal characters and values, as well as the culture of the company that bears their name. It was most interesting to see how these men, friends from their Stanford years, but with very different, though complementary, personal styles, learned to work together in an attitude of complete trust, and to instill in their company a set of values known popularly as the HP Way. Malone, thankfully, does not view Bill and Dave through rose-colored glasses, but is realistic about their personal foibles as well. Numerous examples are provided to show how they learned from their mistakes and went on to re-invent themselves several times over in response to issues of growth, to changing product needs and to the business climate - all while keeping the core set of guiding values in tact. And it was encouraging to be reminded, that despite the enormous fame and wealth that came to them, they never forgot their beginnings, but became almost as well-known for their philanthropic efforts. Although the majority of the book is devoted to the glory days of Hewlett and Packard, Malone also discusses HP under the subsequent leadership of John Young, Lew Platt, the recent disastrous six years under Carly Fiorina in which the HP culture was almost destroyed, and attempts to "fix" things under its current president, Mark Hurd. This book was of particular interest to me, an HP employee from 1980 - 2000 in both its instrument and printer businesses, and provided a trip down nostalgia lane since I knew many of the players from the earlier days. Though not without its frustrations, HP was a great experience for me, especially in marked contrast to my earlier career in the aerospace industry. If I could wish for something more, it would be to include a little more about Agilent, the 1999 spin-off instrument business which was, after all, HP's core business during the first few decades. But overall, the book is eminently readable and highly recommended to anyone interested in business, technology or ethics.

I feel fortunate that I could experience a glimpse of the HP Way

I was a Hewlett Packard employee from 1998 to 2004 (from 1998 to 2000 at their Madrid, Spain offices, from 2000 to 2004 in the Bay Area). Right now I am pursuing my PhD full time at Stanford University, at the Departement of Electrical Engineering headquartered at David Packard's builing. For several reasons that it would take me too long to explain, I have been reflecting lately on how instrumental Hewlett Packard, and The HP Way, have been to my life successes. A 30 year HP veteran, who had worked in the same offices as Bill and Dave when the company employed only several thousand employees, recommended me this book. I was hesitant at first to buy it because on one hand, I had already read many books about HP, including Dave Packard's own. On the other, I thought I needed to put this part of my life behind me. Anyway, I ended up buying it. Not only that, I ended up devouring it over this weekend :D. It has been a very rewarding experience and has left me feeling very fortunate that I could live the last stages of Bill and Dave's masterpiece. For once, the fact that I was hired in Spain, made me able to experience the good HP Way longer (since changes always take time to spread outside the Bay Area and at the time I was hired HP Spain was still the jewel of the crown in business over there; Carly's hiring didn't have much impact in HP Spain's policies while I was there). There is also the fact that things didn't get really bad until the merger was closed in 2002 (although I still remember Carly's betrayal of the "take vacation but I will lay you off anyway in June 2001"). I was so touched by the book that I ended up visiting Dave and Lucille's Packard graves, which are located at a cemetery nearby my home. And there I found the final surprise. Just as these men led very productive, but unostentatious, lives, so did when the left this world (at least for Dave Packard). Humble, unpretentious and barely identifiable among others, Dave and Lucille remains final destination is a testament of the exemplary life led by one of the greatest business titans of all time. Bill's remains are interred further south; I will have to visit them at another time. I deeply recommend this book to aspiring entrepreneurs. The HP Way not only worked, but, as with many other excellent things that one encounters in life, once you have experienced something like that at its best, it's very difficult to settle for less.

A Story of Friendship and Success

I read this book over the course of two plane rides. I did not put it down for the last two hundred forty five pages. What other business writer creates that in a reader? Malone writes authoritatively and eloquently and knows his subject inside and out. If you haven't read his other books and want to know what Silicon Valley is all about, you need to check them out now. The Microprocessor: A Biography is probably my favorite insofar as it shows Malone's rare, borderline uncanny ability to treat complex topics to the satisfaction of both the expert and the layman; I learned more from that book than I did from all my high school science classes combined. Bill & Dave seems to be a counterpart to Malone's brutal dissection of Apple Computer titled Infinite Loop. This book, too, focuses on the "culture" of a corporation, in this instance Hewlett-Packard. Malone is much more positive on HP's culture, and with good reason. The employee relations innovations invented at HP (profit sharing, stock options, flex time, open floor plan cubicle office, free time to work on independent projects) are probably more important than the actual products of this fantastic company. All of these innovations came about because of the character of two men, Dave Packard and William Hewlitt, who became friends while trying out for the football team at Stanford (Dave made it, Bill didn't come close). The affection the author feels for both of these men is obvious, and engenders the story with an energy that enlivens every page to give us an unprecedented view of these two men as human beings. These two men who stand apart as examples of morality, caring, and most of all loyalty in a capitalistic society that is short on all those (especially high-tech, where two years is an eternity to stay at a company). The descriptions of each man's final days is positively poignant. However, this love--and that's what it is--that Malone shows for these two men does not blind him to the fact that, above all, they wanted to make a profit for their company and successes of themselves; they were not bleeding hearts but hard-nosed businessmen who truly believed (and proved) that a "way" of treating people not purely based on self-interest would, in the end, benefit themselves and their company. Particularly brilliant in that respect is Malone's repeated emphasis on the "fork" technique used by these managers, whereby they would make smart business decisions but couch them in altruistic terms. And the results of the company shows the validity of the "HP Way" of doing things. The faults of the book are negligible, such as when the author attempts to defend HP rejecting Steve Wozniak's notion to create the personal computer (wait, so that wasn't a big mistake? Huh?). The strong points of this book, though, are lasting and important and powerful. This book is an accomplishment of a writer at the height of his powers working with a specific goal in mind: to seed in young en

An excellent book!

I am an HP retiree so I have a particular bias here... I am also a great admirer of Mike Malone's writing and television work. You are free to take everything I say with a grain of salt... I liked this book very much. It puts more meat on the bones of Packard's book "The HP Way". It rambles in places (HP "rambled" in places and at times... ex-HPers will understand that) but it's all in all very interesting. The book focuses on Bill and Dave -- the people and their years of building/managing HP from the days at Stanford to their deaths in the 1990's. Above all, Malone never forgets that the story of Bill & Dave and HP is the story of HP people -- as Malone as described in other places, "a company of den mothers and little league coaches." If you are looking for a history of HP's memorable products and technical discussions about them, this is not the book for you. There are some stories about products but they are woven into the context of the bigger picture of HP at the time of the product's introduction or to illustrate the contribution to society the product made (e.g., the HP-35 calculator). I especially enjoyed the beginning sections about Bill & Dave's childhoods and the early years at Stanford. I didn't know Bill was dyslexic and that was the source of both his genius and his shyness. I wish Malone had provided some more information about Lucille Packard and Flora Hewlett (both of whom were very important to HP -- especially during the early years) and their family lives. Malone leaves out some things though... John Minck (who's quoted several times in the book) once sent me a version of the HP Corporate Objectives dated prior to 1966. That version that has "Contribution" as #1 and "Profit" as #2. He told me that Dave put the squash on this right away and elevated "Profit" to #1 resulting in the version we know and love today. One more proof of the point that Bill & Dave were businessmen not fishers of men. Enlightened though they were; they were tough and I personally witnessed one instance of Dave firing someone on the spot. Malone also doesn't mention Dave's "Eleven Simple Rules" anywhere in the book. To me, the three documents that define the HP Way are "The HP Way" (it begins "We have trust and respect for individuals" ... not Dave's book with the same title), the HP Corporate Objectives (1966 - 1990) and Dave's "Eleven Simple Rules". I sent an email about this to Malone and he has promised to rectify this oversight by writing an article about them for either the Wall Street Journal or his regular ABC News column. "Bill and Dave" is a fine book and you will learn much from it. The book describes the HP Way as an imprecise roadmap but also places it in a context with the life and times of it's two progenitors. Malone doesn't make the HP Way any more precise but he certainly makes it much better understood. I'm glad he took the time to write "Bill and Dave" -- it's a story that needs telling and is worth p

Most Admired Leaders

The best book, by far, about the founders of the Hewlett-Packard company. Malone, with an insider's emotional connection and a polished journalistic style, has produced a warm, empathetic portrait of two remarkable men that will likely never be equaled. Malone embeds their story remarkably well in the context of the times, over a fifty-five year business span of twentieth-century America. Working with hitherto unavailable resources, both from the families and the Hewlett-Packard archives, this book dissects the character of the two men (all the harder for the very private, very shy dyslexic Hewlett) and establishes their worth and contribution in a way that, I suspect, many HP alumni will find incredibly accurate and compelling. This is not a hagiography - in places, Malone observes that they did some things on occasion that they later would not tolerate in their employees, avowedly exhibiting a fake product at a trade show, for example. He chronicles some near-misses - learning the lessons of cash flow or ethical behavior or pricing strategies the hard way. And he puts their life evolution into context as well, noting that they did far more than "simply" build a great company - they became business statesmen, national statesmen, and valuable world scene philanthropy, learning all the while throughout long and productive lifetimes. Importantly, Malone interprets Packard's own autobiography for the serious student of HP. Packard wrote a laconic austere account near the end of his life - Malone analyzes many passages and gives them far more liveliness than did Dave himself. Purists might quibble about a number of factual dates and places, but this is not intended as a definitive history - it is instead a monumental offering about a philosophy of business for which the details are better left somewhat sketchy in order to appreciate the tapestry that was composed. At a time that HP has just become the largest (in revenue) high-tech player in the world, and it has been besmirched by a wayward CEO and a sad Board debacle over pretexting, this book will help restore the HP pride factor. It certainly has done so for me. Maybe most importantly, Malone re-sets the bar for corporation leadership today to consider longer term perspective - including the distinct possibility that the bedrock tenets of this duo, with their belief in the worth, dignity, and innate creativity of individuals, are more apropos for the 21st century with its offshored, outsourced virtual teams than ever before.
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