Praise The book was "cited by several members of
The Wall Street Journal's CEO Council as the best management book they've read".
Publishers Weekly called it "worthwhile", although "many of Collins' perspectives on running a business are amazingly simple and commonsense". It was described as "a deeply-researched analysis..." in the
Time list of
The 25 Most Influential Business Management Books.
Criticism In his 2012 article, The Moral Fox, Peter C. DeMarco identifies the fatal error in Collins' book is placing the good in direct opposition to greatness and, thus, Collins' unintendedly created a proxy for greed. DeMarco goes back to Aesop's original fable to expose and correct the error. Holt and Cameron state the book provides a "generic business recipe" that ignores "particular strategic opportunities and challenges."
Steven D. Levitt noted that some of the companies selected as "great" have since gotten into serious trouble, such as
Circuit City and
Fannie Mae, while only
Nucor had "dramatically outperformed the stock market" and "Abbott Labs and Wells Fargo have done okay". He further states that investing in the portfolio of the 11 companies covered by the book, in the year of 2001, would actually result in
underperforming the
S&P 500. Levitt concludes that books like this are "mostly backward-looking" and can't offer a guide for the future. John Greathouse alleges in a critical review that Collins once made a comment stating, "The books never promised that these companies would always be great, just that they were once great." Greathouse claims the statement was an attempt by Collins to defend the book, and other previous works. Greathouse also represents the view that Collins' book
How the Mighty Fall: And Why Some Companies Never Give In blames some of the failed companies themselves for having drastically changed after Collins' books were printed. Phil Rosenzweig describes errors in the fundamental research assumptions of Good to Great. First, heavy reliance on magazine articles as research introduce sources littered with halo effects. He also notes the Wrong End of the Stick delusion used in the hedgehog claims of the book in that successful companies have a luxury of focus which is not possible for less successful companies. Finally, he notes the presence of the Organizational Physics delusion in that Collins does not carefully avoid confusing correlation with causation. ==Similar books==