設萬維讀者為首頁 萬維讀者網 -- 全球華人的精神家園 廣告服務 聯繫我們 關於萬維
 
首  頁 新  聞 視  頻 博  客 論  壇 分類廣告 購  物
搜索>> 發表日誌 控制面板 個人相冊 給我留言
幫助 退出
汪 翔  
陪人工智能一起傻  
https://blog.creaders.net/u/3000/ > 複製 > 收藏本頁
網絡日誌正文
成者蕭何敗者蕭何 2013-02-07 13:10:20

成者蕭何敗者蕭何

 

這個名單裡面主人翁的故事,值得對於經營和股市投資有興趣的朋友合計合計。所以,其價值遠不僅僅只是排名而已。再者,裡面還有幾位猶太人後裔,他們成長的故事,對於我們對孩子的培養,也有很大的啟發。

 

Eight Companies Ruined by Their Founders

February 5, 2013 by Douglas A. McIntyre, Alexander E.M. Hess, Samuel Weigley

 

For every Sergey Brin, there is a Michael Dell. While the Google co-founder and CEO has made his company one of the most valuable in the world with its shares reaching an all-time high, Dell has laid waste to his company.

Dell and financial supporters offered to buy the company for $13.65 a share, 40% lower than what it was when Dell retook the CEO job in early 2007. Investors who bought shares a year ago have taken a haircut of more than 20%. Dell is not alone in his failure. He belongs to a group of founders of large public companies that showed great promise for a time, and then were wrecked by poor decisions, serious legal problems, and lack of innovation.

Perhaps the greatest hallmark of founders who ruin their companies is that they — at least appear to — look out mostly for number one rather than the interests of the company and its shareholders. This is reflected largely in their generally excessive compensation. By contrast, it is worth remembering that Steve Jobs of Apple, earned only $1 in salary and bonus in 2010.

Aubrey McClendon, who was recently ousted as CEO of Chesapeake Energy, made over $100 million in 2008, and remarkably large sums in the years since then. Some of his other actions, such as allegedly borrowing against assets that he co-owned with Chesapeake, raised concerns of conflict of interest. Martha Stewart recently received a new contract from her company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, which has lost money four years in a row. Under the arrangement, she will continue as founder and chief creative officer at the firm until 2017.

That is in addition to the more than $20 million she made over the three years that ended in 2011.

Dov Charney, who drove the company he founded, American Apparel, to the brink of bankruptcy in 2011, made $11.6 million that year. Michael Dell, who in 2010 settled SEC charges that he helped misrepresent Dell’s financials, made more than $21 million during the company’s last three combined fiscal years.

A more complex measurement of these founders’ performance is their lack of vision to transform their companies as the markets in which they operate change. None have shown the foresight Brin did when he moved Google beyond search and into mobile operating systems. And his company is also the dominant force in online video.

Michael Dell did not drive any comparable revolution at Dell. The company never stepped aggressively into the new age of personal computing — tablets and smartphones. The same holds true for Mike Lazaridis, the co-founder of BlackBerry, which did not transform its market share in the corporate smartphone industry into a lead in the consumer sector. Richard M. Schulze, who was the founder, largest shareholder, and de facto head of Best Buy oversaw a period in which the retailer failed to move into e-commerce quickly. In the meantime, Amazon has nearly bulldozed Best Buy under.

Finally, the most maddening, and often damaging, problem with these founders is that they cannot be pushed out. Martha Stewart owns the controlling interest in her company. Andrew Mason and two other shareholders control Groupon. Schulze and Dell own commanding portions of the shares in the companies they founded.

24/7 Wall St. reviewed large, U.S., publicly traded companies that have been irrevocably damaged by their founders or co-founders. We included in our analysis a review of company financials, as well as share price change over time. To reflect the amount of control these individuals have, we reviewed company documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to identify voting share of the founders. If the voting share could not be determined, the total share ownership of the founder was used instead. In the case of Dell, Michael Dell’s voting share reflects his ownership before the completion of the pending move to go private.

These Are the Eight Companies Ruined by Their Founders:

 

1. Dell
> Founder: Michael Dell
> Percent voting share: 13.97%
> Year founded: 1984

Michael Dell started his company in 1984, when he was just 19 years old. By 2001, the company he founded as a college student was the largest computer systems provider in the world. In 2004, Dell resigned as CEO but returned to the position in February 2007. By then, the company had already begun to lose its appeal with consumers in the competitive PC business. Despite Dell’s return, the company continued to struggle in its core business. Dell’s worldwide PC market share fell from 15.9% in 2006 to just 10.7% in 2012. Consumers’ growing preferences for tablets and smartphones over PCs have also hurt the company. In addition to losing ground to competitors, the company also caught the attention of regulators. In 2010, the SEC fined Dell $100 million, and Michael Dell $4 million, alleging the company engaged in accounting fraud intended to mislead investors about its performance. On February 5, 2013 Dell reached a deal with a group of investors that included Michael Dell to go private for $24.4 billion, the largest leveraged buyout since the financial crisis, according to The New York Times.

2. Chesapeake Energy
> Founder: Aubrey McClendon
> Percent voting share: Less than 1%
> Year founded: 1989

Aubrey McClendon, CEO of Chesapeake Energy since he helped co-found it in 1989 has become known for his lavish compensation packages and extreme bets on his company’s performance. In 2008, McClendon had lost much of his personal fortune after borrowing money to buy massive stakes in his own company. That same year, Chesapeake paid McClendon $100 million. Between 2009 and 2011, Chesapeake paid McClendon more than $57 million in total compensation. In April 2012, Reuters reported  that McClendon had again borrowed a large amount of money, in this case $1.1 billion, using his stake in the company’s natural gas and oil wells as collateral. Reuters also uncovered that McClendon was running a $200 million hedge fund that speculatively traded in “the same commodities Chesapeake produces” from within company headquarters. That same month, McClendon gave up his position as chairman due to concerns over potential conflicts of interest with shareholders. He is scheduled to resign as CEO on April 1, 2013.

3. Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia
> Founder: Martha Stewart
> Percent voting share: 86.7%
> Year founded: 1997

Martha Stewart remains chairman of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia even as the company continues to struggle. Stewart’s audience is aging and the company relies too much on its print magazines. Martha Stewart’s image took a serious hit in 2004 when she was found guilty of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and making false statements to a federal investigator after she was indicted for insider trading. Although Martha Stewart launched a high-profile “comeback” campaign after her release, her efforts have not paid off for the company, which has not turned a profit in any year since 2007. The company’s stock price is down more than 58% in the last five years. Part of the problem is executive turnover. There have been at least five CEOs and five CFOs since the company’s inception. Many executives argue that Stewart’s excessive involvement has hampered their ability to make change. The sixth CEO, Lisa Gersh, announced in December that she was leaving the company after serving in the position for just five months. Despite the company’s struggles, Martha Stewart was paid more than $21 million between 2009 and 2011.

4.BlackBerry
> Founder: Mike Lazaridis
> Percent voting share: 5.7% (of outstanding shares)
> Year founded: 1984

Mike Lazaridis co-founded BlackBerry, formerly known as Research In Motion, in 1984 and served as co-CEO of the company, alongside Jim Balsillie, through January 2012. The two pioneered the smartphone revolution. Lazaridis, however, failed to prepare BlackBerry for the upcoming competition from consumer-facing rivals Apple and Samsung. Among the largest mistakes that marked the end of Lazaridis’ tenure were the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet, a four day global service outage — which left phones unable to browse the Internet or access emails or instant messages — and a focus on business professionals even as consumer-centric products such as the iPhone absorbed market share. In the third quarter of 2012, BlackBerry’s worldwide market share of mobile device sales, by operating system, was just 5.3%, down from 11% in the third quarter of 2011 according to Gartner.

5. Countrywide Financial
> Founder: Angelo Mozilo
> Percent voting share: 1.5%
> Date founded: 1968

Former Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo became the face of the subprime mortgage mess once that market collapsed. Under his watch, his company began financing mortgages to high-risk borrowers, which during the housing boom drove the company’s large growth. In 2006, Countrywide financed about 20% of all mortgages in the U.S., more than any other mortgage lender in the country. But the company fell apart when the housing market tanked and borrowers defaulted on their high-interest loans. Countrywide was eventually sold to Bank of America in 2008 for $4 billion, with Mozilo forced out a few months later. The company then faced a barrage of lawsuits arguing that the company used deceptive practices to get people to apply for mortgages they could not afford. Mozilo’s integrity was also called into question when it was reported that several government officials and politicians, such as then-U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd, received favorable mortgage deals simply by being “Friends of Angelo.” In 2010, Mozilo settled an insider trading charge with the SEC for about $67 million. He is also permanently banned from serving as an officer and director of a public company.

6. Groupon
> Founder: Andrew Mason
> Percent voting share: 19.5%
> Date founded: 2008

Andrew Mason, Groupon’s quirky founder and CEO, has stumbled repeatedly in his role during the past couple of years. His company, which provides discounts and daily deals online, had to revise its financial reports in August 2011 after regulators and analysts took issue with its accounting methods. Groupon issued another revision to its financials in early 2012 as the company overstated its 2011 profit by more than $20 million. Because of these problems, along with general concern that the daily deal fad — the company’s core business — may be slowing, the stock price has been declining. It is now roughly a quarter of its initial public offering price of $20 a share, with the company’s market capitalization at $3.3 billion. It didn’t have to be this way. In 2010, Groupon rebuffed Google’s offer to buy the company for up to $6 billion. There has been talk that Mason isn’t mature enough to run a company of this size. For instance, he was criticized for drinking beer at a company meeting and for his public gaffes commenting on why it turned down buyouts.

7. American Apparel 
> Founder: Dov Charney
> Percent voting share: 43.3%
> Date founded: 1989

Dov Charney started and ran American Apparel from his dorm room at Tufts University in the late 1980s. Twenty years later, in 2008, the apparel company had more than 6,700 employees and 197 stores worldwide. But provocative ads and rapid expansion did little to address the problems plaguing the company. In 2009, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency said that a quarter of workers at the company’s downtown Los Angeles manufacturing facility were illegal immigrants. In 2011, two sexual harassment lawsuits were filed against Charney. In December, a former store manager accused Charney of choking him and rubbing dirt in his face. Charney has denied all allegations of misconduct. The company has also struggled to stay afloat financially, running an operating loss in the last 12 months for which financial statements have been released.

8. Best Buy
> Founder: Richard Schulze
> Percent voting share: 20.24%
> Date founded: 1966

Best Buy founder Richard Schulze has presided over a company that has struggled to stay relevant in a sector that is increasingly moving online. Best Buy’s business has taken a sizable hit from online retailers such as Amazon.com. Some industry experts and analysts point out that Best Buy is increasingly becoming a showroom for electronics consumers — meaning that people go to the store to check out the product only to buy it online at a lower price. In the most recent quarter, Best Buy lost $10 million as revenue fell 4% compared to the previous year. The company’s share price is approximately one-third of what it was five years ago. Schulze has also found himself embroiled in a company sex scandal. A Schulze lieutenant, former CEO Brian Dunn, was forced to resign from the company after it was discovered that he had an affair with another staffer. The founder received criticism after an internal investigation found that he did not report that information to the board despite knowing about Dunn’s affair. Schulze announced his retirement from the board shortly after that investigation.

 

瀏覽(1722) (0) 評論(0)
發表評論
我的名片
汪翔 ,34歲
來自: 美國
註冊日期: 2009-10-24
訪問總量: 4,611,824 次
點擊查看我的個人資料
最新發布
· 小盤股的苦命終結無期
· 人工智能有助中國走向民主化嗎?
· 哪些人工智能科技公司最值得投資
· 中學為體,西學為用,是個啥玩意
· 美光科技(MU)的投資價值分析
· 超微電腦(SMCI)值不值得投資
· 生活在中國和美國各自的優劣之處
分類目錄
【《人工智能》】
· 如何用人工智能賺錢
· 文本生成視頻模型帶來的投資機遇
· 智能駕駛技術:谷歌PK百度
· 人工智能對決:ChatGPT PK Gemin
· 智能駕駛技術:谷歌PK特斯拉
· 人工智能兩大應用和對應商機
· 人工智能硬件雙傑,台北擂台開打
· 華裔,妮可·沙納漢 好樣的!
· 印度超越中國的可能性
· 中國的特別國債:強征還是忽悠
【《股市投資雜談》】
· 小盤股的苦命終結無期
· 哪些人工智能科技公司最值得投資
· 美光科技(MU)的投資價值分析
· 超微電腦(SMCI)值不值得投資
· 股市周期性預測
· 行為經濟學與股市風險預測
· AI 催生的數據中心投資機遇
· 利率點陣圖變化與股市走向
· 動物精神和對股市投資的影響
· 華爾街看走眼蘋果在WWDC的表現
【華裔精英榜】
· 華裔,妮可·沙納漢 好樣的!
· 元宇宙:FB 完蛋了還是正在醞釀
【《科幻:智慧女神》】
· 科幻:《智慧女神》(3)欲望
· 科幻:《智慧女神》 (2) 情人
· 科幻:《智慧女神》(1) 誕生
【《短篇小說》】
· 感恩節,雪城出軌(下)
· 感恩節,雪城出軌(中)
· 感恩節,雪城出軌(上)
· 求婚
【《國安一號》(科幻小說)】
· 完美的制度(結尾)
· 釜底抽薪
· 秉性使然
· 竭嘶底里
· 鏗鏘玫瑰
· 人間煉獄
· 不宣而戰
· 暗度陳倉
· 精準打擊
· 鼴鼠出擊
【相聚櫻花盛開時】
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(20)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(19)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(18)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(17)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(16)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(15)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(14)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(13)
【相聚櫻花盛開時】
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(12)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(11)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(10)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(9)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(8)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(7)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(5)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(4)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(3)
· 相聚櫻花盛開時(2)
【《美國生活》】
· 生活在中國和美國各自的優劣之處
· 87號和93號汽油差價擴大很多,意
· 如果是華裔,早被罵的狗血噴頭
· 川普:白宮還是監獄?
· 如何成為健康睿智的超級老人
· 通過南美走線美國的策略
· 財務自由的迷思
· 美國耍橫,中國能不能說不?
· 人民幣兌美元匯率到了該主動貶值
· 第二次次貸危機會不會到來?
【《面書觀察》】
· 面書會成為下一個蘋果嗎?
【《蘋果觀察》】
· 蘋果的人工智能策略與蘋果股票投
· 喬布斯的商戰
· 投資者在歧視蘋果公司嗎?
· Penney的CEO到底誤讀了什麼?
· 是不是蘋果真的出了麻煩?
· 大跌之後的蘋果價值再評價
· 蘋果大跌之後是不是機會?
· 蘋果跌了,誰對了?
· 科技產品新周期循環開始了?
· 再議蘋果的投資價值
【《美國之最》】
· 美國電影巨星你知多少
· 2012年代價最大的新產品敗筆
· 美國單位面積銷售最好的零售店
· 美國人最討厭的行當和機構
· 窮人的錢也很好賺
· 美國最捨得在廣告上花錢的公司
· 即將消失的十大品牌
· 醫院安全指數最高的十大州
· 維穩做得最好和最差的十大國家
· 美國犯罪率最高的十大都市
【《美國經商日誌》】
· 新聞周刊:如何尋找下一個Facebo
· 是什麼能讓國家、企業長治久安?
· 美國的商業誠信是如何打造的
· 商業思考:亞馬遜在忽悠投資者?
· 商業思考: 奢侈品市場的投資機
· 商業思考:最低薪太低與快餐店連
· 商業思考:美國糖果市場的佼佼者
· 美國零售業開始了中國模式?
· 流量最大的十大網站
· 成者蕭何敗者蕭何
【讀書與孩子教育】
· 藥家鑫教給了我們什麼?
· 越來越多的美國人不讀書了
· 美國人為什麼喜歡讀書
· 數碼書革命如何影響我們的生活
· 讀書、無書讀與數碼電子書
【海龜與海帶話題】
· 祖國,你夠格被稱為母親嗎?
· 故鄉、祖國與自作多情
· 海龜(15):如果懦夫也能生存
· 海龜(14):石油、中國、人民幣
· 海龜(13):付出的和獲得的
· 海龜(12):錢學森曾經想叛國嗎
· 海龜(11):官員博士多與錢學森
· 海龜(10):如果幼稚能夠無罪
· 海龜(9):錢學森的尷尬
· 海龜(8):錢學森不訪美的困惑
【雜談】
· 川普真的輸了!急了,坐不住了。
· 白人至上之禍
· 以柔克剛川普無策
· 不靠譜的總統
· 欲加之罪與自欺欺人
· 霸道能打天下
· 人類智商何在?
· 川普貿易戰的底線在哪?
· 讀不懂的美國
· 2018年諾貝爾獎的小遐思
【《中國企業家畫像》】
· 國內經營美容院的成功秘密
· 值得給中國的私有企業貸款嗎?
· 具有猶太商人素質的企業家?
· 驕雄、賭徒、愚昧,還是天才的企
· 精明的企業家,還是唯利是圖的小
· 中國企業家應該是什麼樣的
· 中國企業家畫像之一:孫漢本
· 經營的邏輯與蘭世立的“智慧”
【《猶太經商天才》:目錄和序言】
· 《猶太經商天才》(連載) 003
· 《猶太經商天才》(連載)002
· 《猶太經商天才》(連載) 001
【金融危機】
· 美國經濟進入衰退了嗎?
· 《高盛欺詐門》(8)∶打錯的“算
· 《高盛欺詐門》(7)∶零和博弈的
· 《高盛欺詐門》(6)∶來自股東的
· 讀不懂的中國邏輯(1)
· 《高盛欺詐門》(5)∶陷阱
· 《高盛欺詐門》(4):冰山一角
· 《高盛欺詐門》(3):恨又離不
· 《高盛欺詐門》(2):癥結
· 《高盛欺詐門》(1):序幕
【地產淘金】
· 炒房案例之一:南京
· 外資新設房企數大增 千億美元購
· 該是投資銀行股的時候了嗎?
· 中國樓市觀察(1)
· 地產淘金的最佳時機到了嗎?
· 房價突然跌一半,窮人更慘
· 買房、租房與靠房市發財
【我的中國】
· 人工智能有助中國走向民主化嗎?
· 中學為體,西學為用,是個啥玩意
· 堅持無產階級專政,如何執行?
· 關進籠子的:權力 vs 思想
· 神一般的堅持:四項基本原則
· 近代中國的屈辱歷史從鴉片戰爭開
· 解放軍攻打台灣:理性與後果
· 三十五年前六四鎮壓,付出的代價
· 1840年代的中美比較
· 中國的特別國債:強征還是忽悠
【我的書架】
· 今年諾獎得主的代表作《逃離》全
· 《喬布斯的商戰》(目錄)
· 《喬布斯的商戰》出版,感謝讀者
· 張五常:人民幣在國際上升值會提
· 《博弈華爾街》,讓你再一次感悟
· 《危機與敗局》目錄
· 《危機與敗局》出版發行
· 下雪的早晨 (艾青)
· 《奧巴馬智取白宮》被選參加法蘭
· 下架文章
【《戰神林彪傳》】
· 《戰神林彪傳》第二章 (2)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第二章(1)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第一章(5)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第一章(4)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第一章(3)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第一章(2)
· 《戰神林彪傳》第一章(1)
【《猶太經商天才》】
· 《猶太經商天才》: 2.生不逢時
· 第一章:苦命的孩子(1)
【阿里巴巴與雅虎之戰】
· 福布斯:馬雲和他的敵人們
· 阿里巴巴與雅虎之戰(2)
· 阿里巴巴與雅虎之戰(1)
【《哈佛小子林書豪》】
· 從林書豪身上學到的人生十課之一
· 《哈佛小子林書豪》之二
· 《哈佛小子林書豪》之一
【華裔的戰歌】
· 印度裔和華裔在孩子教育上的差異
· 猶太人和華裔教育孩子的特點和異
· 中國不應對駱家輝抱太大的幻想
· 華裔政界之星——劉雲平(2)
· 華裔政界之星——劉雲平(1)
· 心安則身安,歸不歸的迷思
· 華裔的戰歌(5):誰造就了"
· 華裔的戰歌(4):關注社會與被
· 華裔的戰歌(3):“全A”情結與失
· 華裔的戰歌(2):猶太裔比我們
【國美大戰】
· 企業版的茉莉花革命與公司政治
· 國美之戰,不得不吸取的十條教訓
· 誰來拯救國美品牌
· 國美股權之爭:兩個男人的戰爭
· 現在是投資國美的最佳時機嗎?
· “刺客”鄒曉春起底
· 鄒曉春:已經做好最壞的打算
· 愚昧的陳曉與竊笑的貝恩
· 貝恩資本的真面目(附圖片)
· 陳曉為什麼“勾結”貝恩資本
【《喬布斯的故事》】
· 蘋果消息跟蹤:如果蘋果進入電視
· 喬布斯故事之十四:嬉皮士
· 喬布斯的故事之十三 猶太商人
· 喬布斯的故事之十二:禪心
· 喬布斯的故事之十一:精神導師
· 喬布斯故事之十:大學選擇
· 喬布斯的故事之九:個性的形成
· 喬布斯的故事之八:吸食大麻
· 喬布斯的故事之七:膽大妄為
· 喬布斯的故事之六:貪玩的孩子
【中國美容業】
· 國內日化品牌屢被收購 浙江本土
· 外資日化品牌再下一城 丁家宜外
· 強生收購大寶 併購價刷新中國日
· 從兩千元到一百億的尋夢之路
【加盟店經營】
· 轉載:太平洋百貨撤出北京市場
· Franchise Laws Protect Investo
· Groupon拒絕谷歌收購內幕
· GNC 到底值多少錢?
· 楊國安對話蘇寧孫為民:看不見的
· 張近東:蘇寧帝國征戰史
· 連鎖加盟店成功經營的四大要素
· 加盟店經營管理的五大核心問題
· 高盛搶占新地盤 10月將入股中國
【《解讀日本》】
· 東京人不是冷靜 是麻木冷漠!
· 日本災難給投資者帶來怎樣的機會
· 日本地震災難對世界經濟格局的影
· 美國對日本到底信任幾何?
· 大地震帶來日元大升值的秘密
· 日本原來如此不堪一擊
· 災難面前的日本人民(3)
· 災難面前的日本人民(2)
· 災難面前的日本人民(1)
【《喬布斯的商戰》】
· 蘋果給你上的一堂價值投資課
· 紀念硅谷之父諾伊斯八十四歲誕辰
· 喬布斯的商戰(6): 小富靠勤、中
· 喬布斯的商戰(5): 搏擊命運,機
· 喬布斯的商戰(4):從巨富到赤
· 喬布斯的商戰(1):偶然與必然
· 讓成功追隨夢想:悼念喬布斯
【《鷂鷹》(諜戰小說,原創)】
· 《鷂鷹》(諜戰小說,原創)
【盛世危言】
· 美國長期信用等級下調之後?
· 建一流大學到底缺什麼?
· 同樣是命,為什麼這些孩子的就那
· 中國式“貧民富翁”為何難產
· 做人,你敢這厶牛嗎?
· 言論自由與第一夫人變猴子
· “奈斯比特現象”(下)
· “奈斯比特現象”(上)
· 理性從政和智慧當官
· 中國對美五大優勢
【第一部 《逃離》】
· 朋友,後會有期
· 師兄,人品低劣
· 開心,老友相見
· 拯救,有心無力
· 別了,無法回頭
· 對呀,我得撈錢
· 哭吧,燒盡激情
· 愛情,漸行漸遠
· 再逢,尷尬面對
· 不錯,真的成熟
【《毒丸》(諜戰)】
· 毒丸(13)
· 毒丸(12)
· 毒丸(11)
· 毒丸(10)
· 毒丸(9)
· 毒丸(8)
· 毒丸(7)
· 毒丸(6)
· 毒丸(5)
· 毒丸(4)
【《美國小鎮故事》】
· 拜金女(五):免費精子
· 拜金女(四):小女孩的憂傷
· 拜金女(三):醜小鴨變白天鵝
· 拜金女(二):艱難移民路
· 拜金女(一):惡名在外
· 拯救羅伯特(四之四)
· 奇葩的穆斯林(下)
· 奇葩的穆斯林(上)
· 拯救羅伯特(四之三)
· 拯救羅伯特(四之二)
【《追風》(戰爭小說)】
· 追風:第二十五章
· 追風:第二十四章
· 追風:第二十三章
· 追風:第二十二章
· 追風:第二十一章
· 追風:第二十章
· 追風:第十九章
· 追風:第十八章
· 追風:第十七章
· 追風:第十六章
【菜園子】
· 春天到了,你的大蒜開長了嗎?(
· 春天到了,該種韭菜了
· 室內種花,注意防癌
· 我的美國菜園子(3)
· 我的美國菜園子(2)
· 我的美國菜園子(1)
【科幻小說:幽靈對決】
· 幽靈對決:異象與聯盟
· 幽靈對決:意識的糾纏
· 科幻小說:幽靈對決: 首次攻擊
【魏奎生 作品】
· 童年記憶
· 那年,那月,那思念
· 故鄉的老宅
【《愛國是個啥?》】
· 愛國(1): 愛國心是薰陶出來的
【美國投資移民】
· 美國投資移民議題(2)
· 美國投資移民議題(1)
【理性人生】
· 關於汽車保險,你不能不知的
· 感恩之感
· 失敗男人背後站着怎樣的女人(2
· 什麼是男人的成功?
· 失敗男人背後站着怎樣的女人(1
· 轉載:巴菲特的財富觀
· 痛悼79年湖北高考理科狀元蔣國兵
【《格林伯格傳》】
· 114億人民幣的損失該怪誰
· 基於避孕套的哲理
· 成功投資八大要領
· 企業制度的失敗是危機的根源
· 斯皮策買春,錯在哪?
【《奧巴馬大傳》】
· 一日省
· 追逐我的企盼
· 保持積極樂觀的生活態度
· 陌生的微笑
· 奧巴馬營銷角度談心理
· 神奇小子奧巴馬
· 相信奇蹟、擁抱奇蹟、創造奇蹟
· 什麼樣的人最可愛:獻給我心中的
· 希拉里和奧巴馬將帥談
· 是你教會了別人怎樣對待你
【參考文章】
· 美國最省油的八種汽車
· 美國房市最糟糕的十大州
· 美國歷史上最富有的十位總統
· 世界十大債務大國
· 新鮮事:巴菲特投資IBM
· 星巴克的五美元幫助產生就業機會
· 轉載: 蘋果前CEO:驅逐喬布斯非
· 華爾街日報:軟件將吃掉整個世界
· 林靖東: 惠普與喬布斯的“後PC時
· 德國是如何成為歐洲的中國的
【開博的領悟】
· 打造強國需要不同聲音
存檔目錄
2024-07-02 - 2024-07-07
2024-06-01 - 2024-06-30
2024-05-01 - 2024-05-31
2024-04-21 - 2024-04-30
2022-03-01 - 2022-03-17
2022-02-07 - 2022-02-28
2019-08-01 - 2019-08-01
2019-07-01 - 2019-07-14
2019-06-17 - 2019-06-30
2019-05-09 - 2019-05-16
2018-12-02 - 2018-12-13
2018-11-04 - 2018-11-30
2018-10-08 - 2018-10-08
2018-05-02 - 2018-05-07
2018-04-04 - 2018-04-19
2018-03-07 - 2018-03-10
2018-02-05 - 2018-02-22
2017-12-23 - 2017-12-23
2017-11-06 - 2017-11-28
2017-10-09 - 2017-10-30
2017-09-01 - 2017-09-29
2017-08-11 - 2017-08-31
2017-06-19 - 2017-06-19
2017-05-08 - 2017-05-23
2017-04-22 - 2017-04-22
2017-03-02 - 2017-03-02
2017-02-01 - 2017-02-25
2017-01-29 - 2017-01-29
2015-03-02 - 2015-03-02
2014-12-13 - 2014-12-13
2014-09-20 - 2014-09-20
2014-06-10 - 2014-06-10
2014-05-14 - 2014-05-27
2013-12-06 - 2013-12-06
2013-11-01 - 2013-11-29
2013-10-16 - 2013-10-27
2013-09-25 - 2013-09-26
2013-08-27 - 2013-08-28
2013-05-08 - 2013-05-08
2013-04-03 - 2013-04-13
2013-03-06 - 2013-03-24
2013-02-02 - 2013-02-27
2013-01-07 - 2013-01-31
2012-12-01 - 2012-12-30
2012-11-07 - 2012-11-30
2012-10-02 - 2012-10-31
2012-09-03 - 2012-09-26
2012-08-03 - 2012-08-30
2012-07-06 - 2012-07-29
2012-06-01 - 2012-06-21
2012-05-02 - 2012-05-30
2012-04-02 - 2012-04-26
2012-03-01 - 2012-03-30
2012-02-02 - 2012-02-29
2012-01-01 - 2012-01-26
2011-12-02 - 2011-12-30
2011-11-15 - 2011-11-29
2011-10-06 - 2011-10-21
2011-09-07 - 2011-09-23
2011-08-04 - 2011-08-31
2011-05-01 - 2011-05-01
2011-04-01 - 2011-04-16
2011-03-01 - 2011-03-31
2011-02-07 - 2011-02-24
2011-01-23 - 2011-01-24
2010-12-06 - 2010-12-22
2010-11-09 - 2010-11-28
2010-09-01 - 2010-09-28
2010-08-12 - 2010-08-31
2010-05-02 - 2010-05-20
2010-04-01 - 2010-04-30
2010-03-02 - 2010-03-31
2010-01-14 - 2010-01-29
2009-12-01 - 2009-12-22
2009-11-01 - 2009-11-30
2009-10-24 - 2009-10-31
 
關於本站 | 廣告服務 | 聯繫我們 | 招聘信息 | 網站導航 | 隱私保護
Copyright (C) 1998-2024. Creaders.NET. All Rights Reserved.