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  • Roddick, Anita

    Published by HarperCollins Publishers Limited, 2001

    ISBN 10: 0722539878ISBN 13: 9780722539873

    Seller: Better World Books: West, Reno, NV, U.S.A.

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    Condition: Good. 1st. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.


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  • Roddick, Anita

    Published by Roddick Books, Anita, 2005

    ISBN 10: 0954395956ISBN 13: 9780954395957

    Seller: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.

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    Condition: Very Good. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects.


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  • Roddick, Anita

    Published by Zondervan, 2001

    ISBN 10: 000710796XISBN 13: 9780007107964

    Seller: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.

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    Condition: Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.


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  • RODDICK, ANITA.

    Published by London, Thorsons, n.d. (circa 2000)., 2000

    Seller: Time Booksellers, Somerville, VIC, Australia

    Association Member: ANZAAB ILAB

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    8vo; pp. xi, 292 (last 7 pages blank); illustrations in bronze and black; dustjacket; otherwise fine copy.

  • Roddick, Anita

    Published by Published by Thorsons an Imprint of HarperCollins 77-85 Fulham Palace Road, London First Edition . 2000., 2000

    Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom

    Association Member: PBFA

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    First edition hard back binding in publisher's original peach paper covers, copper lettering to maroon paper spine. 8vo 9½'' x 6¼'' 287 pp ISBN 0722539878. Fine condition book in Fine condition dust wrapper, not price clipped, as new. Dust wrapper supplied in archive acetate film protection, this is not adhered to the book or to the dust wrapper and can easily be removed should you so wish. Member of the P.B.F.A. ECONOMICS & COMMERCE.

  • Roddick, Anita

    Published by Thorsons, London, 2000

    ISBN 10: 000710796XISBN 13: 9780007107964

    Seller: Dromanabooks, Newstead, VIC, Australia

    Association Member: IOBA

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    Book Signed

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    Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Index. Looks unread. Signed on title page, 700gms weight; Color Illustrations; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 294 pages; Signed by Author.

  • Seller image for Business as Unusual: The Triumph of Anita Roddick for sale by Moneyblows Books & Music

    Roddick, Anita

    Published by Thorsons, 2000

    Seller: Moneyblows Books & Music, Lee, NH, U.S.A.

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Signed by the author on the title page. Slight edgewear, rubbing to dust jacket, bumping to book corners. Signed by Author(s).

  • Roddick Anita

    Published by Thorsons, 2001

    ISBN 10: 000712273XISBN 13: 9780007122738

    Seller: MyBookshop, Rainbow, VIC, Australia

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    pb. Condition: Very Good. cover has crease & corners slightly worn otherwise tight book.


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  • Seller image for Business As Unusual. for sale by Thylacine Fine Books

    Roddick, Anita (signed)

    Seller: Thylacine Fine Books, Penguin, TAS, Australia

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    Thorsons London 2000. Card covers, illustrated, 287pp. Very good. Signed by the author inside front panel. Australian Tax on Low Value Imported Goods (LVIG) exempt.

  • RODDICK, Anita.

    Published by Thorsons,, London,, 2000

    ISBN 10: 0722539878ISBN 13: 9780722539873

    Seller: Burwood Books, Wickham Market, United Kingdom

    Association Member: PBFA

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    Hardback. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Hardback. Dust Jacket. Large 8vo. pp xi, 287. Original publishers burgundy cloth over cream boards, lettered gilt at the spine. This account charts the progress of Anita Roddick and her company The Body Shop through the 1990s. Signed by the author on the title page. ISBN: 0722539878 Very good indeed in very good dust jacket, with some edgewear and one small chip at the lower rear corner. Signedes.

  • Softcover. Condition: gut. 2001. Funky Business paved the way; "Traditional roles, jobs, skills, ways of doing things, insights, strategies, aspirations, fears and expectations no longer count. In this environment we cannot have business as usual. We need business as unusual." And here it is, though a guided tour through the past decade at the Body Shop is probably not what the Swedes had in mind. Since its inception in 1976, the Body Shop has pioneered socially responsive business practices and challenged the nature of the cosmetics industry. Success transformed it into a household name and by 1987, Anita Roddick had accepted the Confederation of British Industry's award for Company of the Year. Naturally, that's when things got tricky--in consultant-speak, the Body Shop reached adolescence. Business as Unusual gives the impression that throughout the 90s, just about everything that could go wrong did. Organisationally, the enterprise had spiralled into a complex and inefficient mess--"a lego set from Hell" in Roddick's words--with a bottom line under pressure from competition happy to mimic the packaging and ethos for their own cut-price ethical chic. Most damaging of all was the spate of negative press the Body Shop received during the mid-90s from commentators queuing up to question their values and practices. By the end of the decade, redundancies and change were high on the corporate agenda as the Body Shop restructured (with "kindness") in an attempt to reinvent the brand for the new millennium.It all makes for an engrossing business history, but Business as Unusual is not just about the Body Shop. It also serves as a checklist to the major causes and campaigns of the 90s. Much of it is self-evident--"no company can afford to waste valuable brain power simply because it's wearing a bra;" the planet is precious; greed is bad--and the worthiness does occasionally grate, but elsewhere the Body Shop's activism stands out as a shining example of the good that can be achieved through orchestrated pressure. With her unique brand of pumice-stone politics, Anita Roddick has done the unusual and shown that success does not have to come at the expense of a conscience. Business as Unusual has its faults but it makes a thought-provoking read and shows that Anita Roddick has lost none of her passion for change. Her ethics may stink, but it's of peppermint, tangerine and cocoa butter. Flaunting a title like Business as Unusual, Anita Roddick's company biography is anything but your run-of-the-mill book on how to create, nurture, and run a successful company. While it does give a firsthand account of the birth of The Body Shop and Roddick's own particular leadership style of creative (and sometimes chaotic) passion, it doubles as a clarion call for business to tackle the big issues of life alongside the pursuit of profits, with heart, soul and conscience. Roddick grew up in a large Italian immigrant family in small town in blue-collar England, where she was instilled with an intense work ethic and an irreverent, entrepreneurial spirit. Though she admits to having opened her first Body Shop as a way to make ends meet, Roddick developed the company around her zealous belief that, since there is "no more powerful institution in society than business it is more important than ever before for business to assume a moral leadership in society." Her concern for protecting the environment and indigenous people's cultures, and of seeing all of life as interconnected, have directed the growth of the company and inspired much of this book. Her account moves from an initial description of what she sees as the problem with "business as usual," through a history of The Body Shop as illustrating her philosophies on fostering passionate activism, building community, making it as a woman, and succeeding in business. Though Roddick's tone occasionally lapses into what might be interpreted as a rather self-righteous one (particularly in her references to most of the company's competition as merely "imitation"), it is driven by a feisty belief in her ideals. The chapter that describes The Body Shop launch into the U.S. market and its subsequent problems with intense competition is not exactly an American love-fest, but for those readers on this side of the Atlantic who don't take themselves too seriously, it's an informative and often amusing take on the trials of cross-cultural marketing. While praise of The Body Shop's good deeds to date is woven into much of what she discusses, Roddick is not afraid of being honest. Indeed, she presents some of the company's less flattering underbelly, such as a failed experiment in trading directly with an indigenous tribe and the unsuccessful "reorganization" of the company by an unresearched external consultant, which is far more daring than most business leaders are in discussing their corporate offspring. The book would have benefited from a more detailed and less defensive presentation of the media storm that surrounded the company from 1992 to 1994 (which comes dangerously close to being a diatribe), but Roddick's conversational writing style--extremely effective in relaying fervent dedication--doesn't leave room for a lot of legal analysis. This is an entertaining read with a serious message, a lilting and somewhat whimsical manifesto. Not merely the story of one woman's pursuit of business success and the history and philosophy of The Body Shop, it is an invigorating guidebook for anyone eager to marry an entrepreneurial, principled spirit with a keen sense of social justice. Die Body Shop Story.Die Vision einer außergewöhnlichen Unternehmerin. BodyShop Anita Roddick Ökologie Naturkosmetik Natur-Kosmetik Konservierung Kampagnen Gewalt Kinderarbeit Unterdrückung Menschenrechtsverletzungen Königin Pfefferminz-Lotion Tierversuc In englischer Sprache. 352 pages. 21,4 x 14,9 x 1,9 cm.

  • Softcover. Condition: gut. 2001. Funky Business paved the way; "Traditional roles, jobs, skills, ways of doing things, insights, strategies, aspirations, fears and expectations no longer count. In this environment we cannot have business as usual. We need business as unusual." And here it is, though a guided tour through the past decade at the Body Shop is probably not what the Swedes had in mind. Since its inception in 1976, the Body Shop has pioneered socially responsive business practices and challenged the nature of the cosmetics industry. Success transformed it into a household name and by 1987, Anita Roddick had accepted the Confederation of British Industry's award for Company of the Year. Naturally, that's when things got tricky--in consultant-speak, the Body Shop reached adolescence. Business as Unusual gives the impression that throughout the 90s, just about everything that could go wrong did. Organisationally, the enterprise had spiralled into a complex and inefficient mess--"a lego set from Hell" in Roddick's words--with a bottom line under pressure from competition happy to mimic the packaging and ethos for their own cut-price ethical chic. Most damaging of all was the spate of negative press the Body Shop received during the mid-90s from commentators queuing up to question their values and practices. By the end of the decade, redundancies and change were high on the corporate agenda as the Body Shop restructured (with "kindness") in an attempt to reinvent the brand for the new millennium.It all makes for an engrossing business history, but Business as Unusual is not just about the Body Shop. It also serves as a checklist to the major causes and campaigns of the 90s. Much of it is self-evident--"no company can afford to waste valuable brain power simply because it's wearing a bra;" the planet is precious; greed is bad--and the worthiness does occasionally grate, but elsewhere the Body Shop's activism stands out as a shining example of the good that can be achieved through orchestrated pressure. With her unique brand of pumice-stone politics, Anita Roddick has done the unusual and shown that success does not have to come at the expense of a conscience. Business as Unusual has its faults but it makes a thought-provoking read and shows that Anita Roddick has lost none of her passion for change. Her ethics may stink, but it's of peppermint, tangerine and cocoa butter. Flaunting a title like Business as Unusual, Anita Roddick's company biography is anything but your run-of-the-mill book on how to create, nurture, and run a successful company. While it does give a firsthand account of the birth of The Body Shop and Roddick's own particular leadership style of creative (and sometimes chaotic) passion, it doubles as a clarion call for business to tackle the big issues of life alongside the pursuit of profits, with heart, soul and conscience. Roddick grew up in a large Italian immigrant family in small town in blue-collar England, where she was instilled with an intense work ethic and an irreverent, entrepreneurial spirit. Though she admits to having opened her first Body Shop as a way to make ends meet, Roddick developed the company around her zealous belief that, since there is "no more powerful institution in society than business it is more important than ever before for business to assume a moral leadership in society." Her concern for protecting the environment and indigenous people's cultures, and of seeing all of life as interconnected, have directed the growth of the company and inspired much of this book. Her account moves from an initial description of what she sees as the problem with "business as usual," through a history of The Body Shop as illustrating her philosophies on fostering passionate activism, building community, making it as a woman, and succeeding in business. Though Roddick's tone occasionally lapses into what might be interpreted as a rather self-righteous one (particularly in her references to most of the company's competition as merely "imitation"), it is driven by a feisty belief in her ideals. The chapter that describes The Body Shop launch into the U.S. market and its subsequent problems with intense competition is not exactly an American love-fest, but for those readers on this side of the Atlantic who don't take themselves too seriously, it's an informative and often amusing take on the trials of cross-cultural marketing. While praise of The Body Shop's good deeds to date is woven into much of what she discusses, Roddick is not afraid of being honest. Indeed, she presents some of the company's less flattering underbelly, such as a failed experiment in trading directly with an indigenous tribe and the unsuccessful "reorganization" of the company by an unresearched external consultant, which is far more daring than most business leaders are in discussing their corporate offspring. The book would have benefited from a more detailed and less defensive presentation of the media storm that surrounded the company from 1992 to 1994 (which comes dangerously close to being a diatribe), but Roddick's conversational writing style--extremely effective in relaying fervent dedication--doesn't leave room for a lot of legal analysis. This is an entertaining read with a serious message, a lilting and somewhat whimsical manifesto. Not merely the story of one woman's pursuit of business success and the history and philosophy of The Body Shop, it is an invigorating guidebook for anyone eager to marry an entrepreneurial, principled spirit with a keen sense of social justice. Die Body Shop Story.Die Vision einer außergewöhnlichen Unternehmerin. BodyShop Anita Roddick Ökologie Naturkosmetik Natur-Kosmetik Konservierung Kampagnen Gewalt Kinderarbeit Unterdrückung Menschenrechtsverletzungen Königin Pfefferminz-Lotion Tierversuc In englischer Sprache. 352 pages. 21,4 x 14,9 x 1,9 cm.