Osvald M. Bjelland and Robert Chapman Wood
IBM brought 150,000 employees and stakeholders together to help move its latest technologies to market. Both the difficulties it faced and the successes it achieved provide important lessons.
When a company transitions to lean manufacturing, the bottom line generally gets worse before it gets better. A new tool called “value stream accounting” helps managers plan for the short-term impacts and better understand the long-term benefit.
In the supply chain, knowledge sharing is power—if you know what to share and when. The advantages are there, but buyers and sellers must keep in mind the structures for sharing, and recognize that partners don't always benefit equally.
Entrepreneur Joe Fox does not count on large-scale innovations to move his business forward. Rather, he relies on a steady supply of “mini-innovations” to keep his companies ahead of megacompetitors.
Academic marketing scientists have developed many rigorous models of analysis, technique and prediction over the past half century. Alas, the relevance of these models has faded. Seven strategies to balance rigor and relevance.
INTELLIGENCE
New developments, research and ideas in management