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Published byBarbra Allen Modified over 9 years ago
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When America's industrial growth boomed, only the large businesses could afford the factories, machinery, and labor.
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Railroad The railroad industry was a perfect example A large enterprise with enormous costs.
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This led to new idea in management - departmental mangers responsible for part of the operation.
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Merger Movement
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The best way companies could survive bad economic times, like the depression of the 1870s, was to merge companies - combining several competing firms under a single head.
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Best example of merging was John D. Rockefeller
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In the 1860s he started a kerosene business that became Standard Oil in Ohio.
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There were hundreds of oil refineries in Ohio and Pennsylvania.
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By 1870 his company, Standard Oil, had gobbled up all in Ohio.
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By 1882 his company owned most throughout the country.
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Rockefeller could demand rail shipping rates of 10 cents a barrel while the few competitors were asking 35 because he dominate the market.
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Horizontal and Vertical Integration
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Horizontal - like Rockefeller: merging all the competing companies in one area of business into one
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Vertical - controlling all aspects of production form raw materials to final delivery of the product
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Andrew Carnegie had the most success with vertical
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bought up coal mines and iron ore deposits for his steel mills, then bough railroads and ships to transport raw materials and ship products to market.
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He owned every aspect of the steel industry.
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