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Made in Korea: Chung Ju Yung and the Rise of Hyundai



This excerpt is about the rise of Hyundai, a South Korean company that has become one of the world's leading automakers. Chung Ju Yung, the founder of Hyundai, is credited with helping the company become one of the world's leading automakers. Chung's management techniques, which were considered extreme by today's standards, were successful in seizing business opportunities and forging alliances wi... more details
Key Features:
  • The founder, Chung Ju Yung, helped Hyundai become one of the world's leading automakers
  • His management techniques, which were considered extreme by today's standards, were successful in seizing business opportunities and forging alliances with the prevailing powers
  • Chung's success is an example of the power of entrepreneurship.


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Features
Author Richard M. Steers
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780415920506
Publisher ROUTLEDGE
Manufacturer Routledge
Description
This excerpt is about the rise of Hyundai, a South Korean company that has become one of the world's leading automakers. Chung Ju Yung, the founder of Hyundai, is credited with helping the company become one of the world's leading automakers. Chung's management techniques, which were considered extreme by today's standards, were successful in seizing business opportunities and forging alliances with the prevailing powers. Chung's success is an example of the power of entrepreneurship.

Just a few decades ago, South Korea was an agrarian country, a backwater of international business. The average life span was 47 years, the average per capita annual income less than a hundred dollars a year. By the end of the 20th century, Korea had risen to become the world's 11th largest economy, the eighth largest trading partner of the U.S., and a global leader in construction, semiconductors, shipbuilding, and steel production. Steers, a University of Oregon business professor who has written two previous books on Korean business issues, believes that a big part of that country's rise is good old-fashioned entrepreneurship. What Americans admire so much about Bill Gates and Phil Knight--the vision, the tenacity, the refusal to back down--is actually found all over the world. In Korea, it's best personified by Chung Ju Yung, who created the Hyundai Business Group. By the time Chung retired in 1991, Hyundai accounted for 16 percent of Korea's gross domestic product and 12 percent of its total exports. Chung founded Hyundai (it means modern in Korean) in 1946 as a car-repair company, then quickly moved into the construction business. He became the U.S. Army's favorite contractor during the Korean War, and, afterwards, expanded Hyundai's ventures to include electronics, shipbuilding, oil refining, securities and investments, and automobiles. Almost any businessperson can draw lessons from Chung's success. Some of his management tactics would be considered extreme today--he once hiked through the woods in the middle of the night, waking up workers at a construction site to check on their progress--but his ability to seize business opportunities, forge alliances with the prevailing powers, and deliver upon promises made is certainly inspirational. --Lou Schuler
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