A business that produces nothing but money is a bad business, Henry Ford said. One of the first to put into practice the ideas of welfare capitalism aimed at improving working people’s living conditions. He doubled wages, halved the price of a car, and produced more than two million units of output per year, and he also introduced a 40-hour workweek. For almost a hundred years, leaders of all ranks and entrepreneurs have been studying his works in search of the Holy Grail. The book “Today and Tomorrow” contains descriptions of the processes and developments of Ford Motor Company, which were innovative for their time. Ideas regarding labor policy, reflections on the nature of business, and much more. This book inspired many outstanding people, for example Taiichi Ohno and Shigeo Shingo, in creating the concept of lean production. To this day, it remains relevant and helps give birth to new ideas.