Building a Global Bank: The Transformation of Banco Santander

Hardback

Main Details

Title Building a Global Bank: The Transformation of Banco Santander
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Mauro F. Guillen
By (author) Adrian Tschoegl
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:280
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 152
Category/GenreHistory of specific subjects
Banking
ISBN/Barcode 9780691131252
ClassificationsDewey:332.150946
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 3 line illus. 19 tables.

Publishing Details

Publisher Princeton University Press
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publication Date 21 July 2008
Publication Country United States

Description

In 2004, Spain's Banco Santander purchased Britain's Abbey National Bank in a deal valued at fifteen billion dollars--an acquisition that made Santander one of the ten largest financial institutions in the world. Here, Mauro Guillen and Adrian Tschoegl tackle the question of how this once-sleepy, family-run provincial bank in a developing economy transformed itself into a financial-services group with more than sixty-six million customers on three continents. Founded 150 years ago in the Spanish port city of the same name, Santander is the only large bank in the world where three successive generations of one family have led top management and the board of directors. But Santander is fully modern. Drawing on rich data and in-depth interviews with family members and managers, Guillen and Tschoegl reveal how strategic decisions by the family and complex political, social, technological, and economic forces drove Santander's unprecedented rise to global prominence. The authors place the bank in this competitive milieu, comparing it with its rivals in Europe and America, and showing how Santander, faced with growing competition in Spain and Europe, sought growth opportunities in Latin America and elsewhere. They also address the complexities of managerial succession and family leadership, and weigh the implications of Santander's stellar rise for the consolidation of European banking. Building a Global Bank tells the fascinating story behind this powerful corporation's remarkable transformation--and of the family behind it.

Author Biography

Mauro F. Guillen is director of the Lauder Institute and the Dr. Felix Zandman Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. His books include "The Taylorized Beauty of the Mechanical" and "The Limits of Convergence" (both Princeton). Adrian Tschoegl is lecturer in management at the Wharton School and has written extensively about international banking.

Reviews

"[T]he Santander experience is worth reading about and Building a Global Bank offers an excellent opportunity to do so. In addition to archival materials and secondary sources, the authors draw extensively on myriad interviews with financial industry leaders, policymakers, and journalists. In doing so, they write for a general audience and offer an accessible and data-rich institutional history, complete with a detailed ... chronology of the bank's evolution and several citation-filled pages of endnotes."--Joseph M. Santos, EH.net "Guillen and Tschoegl provide an astute analysis of the management style and organizational structure of Santander, focusing on their strategy for internationalization."--Alan M. Rugman, Administrative Science Quarterly "Guillen and Tschoegl have written a well-researched case study."--Jose L. Garcfa-Ruiz, Bankhistorische