Chandler used the papers of his ancestor
Henry Varnum Poor, a leading analyst of the railroad industry, the publisher of the
American Railroad Journal, and a founder of
Standard & Poor's, as a basis for his Ph.D. thesis. Chandler began looking at large-scale enterprises in the early 1950s when he assisted a team of researchers that supported
Alfred P. Sloan's production of his long delayed book
My Years with General Motors (1964). Chandler's book
Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise (1962) examined the organization of
E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company,
Standard Oil of New Jersey,
General Motors, and
Sears, Roebuck and Co. He found that
managerial organization developed in response to the
corporation's
business strategy. The book was voted the eleventh most influential management book of the 20th century in a poll of the Fellows of the
Academy of Management. Chandler, with Stephen Salsbury, his co-author, provided a detailed study of re-organisation of top-level management at
Du Pont and
General Motors in their biography of its instigator,
Pierre S. Du Pont and the making of the Modern Industrial Corporation (1971). Chandler and Salsbury explained how the inventory crises of 1920–21 at both companies prompted radical structural change that resulted in the pioneering reformation of both companies that later would be identify them as America's first
multi-divisional corporations. This emphasis on the importance of a cadre of managers to organize and run large corporations was expanded into a "managerial revolution" in
The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (1977), for which he received a
Pulitzer Prize. He pursued that book's themes further in
Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism, (1990) and co-edited an
anthology on the same themes, with
Franco Amatori and
Takashi Hikino,
Big Business and the Wealth of Nations (1997). ==
The Visible Hand==