Fortune called Tom Peters the "Ur-guru" of management, and compares him to Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman, and H.L. Mencken. The Economist tagged him the Uber-guru; and BusinessWeek's take on his "unconventional views" led them to label Peters "business's best friend and worst nightmare." In 2004, the Bloomsbury Press book Movers and Shakers: The 100 Most Influential Figures in Modern Business reviewed the historical contributions of pathbreaking management thinkers and practitioners, from Machiavelli and JP Morgan to Tom and Jack Welch.
When Tom & Bob Waterman wrote In Search of Excellence 25 years ago, they introduced the world of business to the idea and value of Excellence per se as an inspiring and profitable aspiration—at a time when America's competitiveness was under fullblown assault. The world and management practice have changed in the years following Search, and although the companies profiled have adapted remarkably well along the way, the challenges today are more daunting than ever. Excellence as a way of life and an unmatchable competitive advantage has never been more important
In 1999, Search was honored by NPR as one of the "Top Three Business Books of the Century"—and ranked as the "greatest business book of all time" in a 2002 poll by Britain's Bloomsbury Publishing. Tom followed Search with over a dozen additional international bestsellers. Among them: A Passion for Excellence (1985, with Nancy Austin); Thriving on Chaos (1987); Liberation Management (1992: acclaimed as the "Management Book of the Decade" for the '90s); the millennium troika in 1999 on Reinventing Work in the face of new global competition (The Brand You50, The Project50, and The Professional Service Firm50); and, in 2003, the provocative, colorful Re-imagine! Business Excellence in a Disruptive Age. He is currently working on a book that renews and strengthens his clarion call for Excellence.
Two Tom Peters biographies have been published: Corporate Man to Corporate Skunk: The Tom Peters Phenomenon and Tom Peters: The Bestselling Prophet of the Management Revolution (part of a four-book series of business biographies on Peters, Bill Gates, Peter Drucker, and Warren Buffet). In a 2002 in-depth analytic study, Accenture's Institute for Strategic Change scored Peters 2nd among the top 50 "Business Intellectuals."
Tom, who is widely credited with almost single-handedly launching the "management guru industry," now billions of dollars in size, writes, reflects, and then presents some 60 or so major seminars each year, more than half outside the U.S. He estimates that since 1978, when the work on Search began, he's given about 2,500 speeches, flown 5,000,000+ miles, spoken before 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 people, and presented in 47 states and 63 countries. Since 2004, Tom also has devoted significant energy to his award-winning (a “Top 500” designation) blog—www.tompeters.com.