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The Motley Fool October 22, 2009 Jennifer Schonberger |
Can America Innovate Itself Out of Stagnation? One of the greatest fears of many economists is that the financial recovery of the United States will be doomed to the same fate Japan's economy once faced: a decade or more of stagnant growth. |
The Motley Fool October 26, 2009 Jennifer Schonberger |
How Innovation Can Improve Your Investing Clayton Christensen, the author of The Innovator's Dilemma, and the foremost expert on innovation in the U.S., shares his thoughts on the power of new ideas. |
Inc. September 2004 Mike Hofman |
The Innovator's Next Bestseller? Just as kids await the latest Harry Potter installment, so do business leaders look for Clayton M. Christensen's next offering. In "Seeing What's Next," the Harvard Business School professor and his co-authors explain how to spot industry-changing innovation. |
Fast Company December 2004 Carleen Hawn |
Lessons on Innovation From Microsoft There are plenty of internal reasons why Microsoft's record of innovation is so lackluster. But the company's failure also points to three much bigger lessons about innovation. |
BusinessWeek October 6, 2003 Robert D. Hof |
Innovate or Die Clayton Christensen's accessible and rigorous new book provides a survival manual for corporate managers. The Innovator's Solution makes a credible case that established companies can defy the odds after all, provided they offer disruptive new products of their own. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2005 Anthony Durniak |
The Innovator's Dilemma: 3.0 Seeing What's Next by Clayton M. Christensen, Scott D. Anthony & Erik A. Roth is recommended reading for anyone involved with technology. But readers of either of the previous two books will find little new substance in this one. |
The Motley Fool October 15, 2009 Mac Greer |
Will Apple Lose Its Edge? Disruptive innovation expert Clay Christensen talks movers and shakers. |
IndustryWeek August 1, 2008 John Teresko |
Bookshelf: The Innovator's Guide To Growth: Putting Disruptive Innovation To Work In this new book, the authors take the subject of innovation to the next level -- implementation. |
The Motley Fool February 23, 2005 John Reeves |
Predicting the Next Wal-Mart Studying the history of disruptive innovation can help us find tomorrow's winners. |
Fast Company November 2003 Polly LaBarre |
The Industrialized Revolution Clay Christensen's idea of "disruptive innovation" made him the unintended mascot of the dotcom boom. So what's he thinking now? |
The Motley Fool December 19, 2011 Brian Stoffel |
Here's Where This Guru Is Investing Clayton Christensen's stock holdings reveal disruptive innovators like Cree and salesforce.com. |
Reason June 2009 Brian Doherty |
I.T. Go Home Many highly trained immigrants choose to return to countries such as India and China rather than staying in the far wealthier United States. |
Pharmaceutical Executive June 1, 2012 Ben Comer |
Disruption in the C-Suite Clayton Christensen, author of "The Innovator's Dilemma," offers to collaborate with pharma CEOs on solutions to the strategic impasse around flagging drug productivity. |
HBS Working Knowledge June 4, 2012 Carmen Nobel |
Applying Business Theories to Your Life Clayton Christensen's book, How Will You Measure Your Life? stresses the importance of allocating resources in such a way that they match the strategy, starting with tales of woe from giants like Unilever and Apple and segueing into personal stories. |
HBS Working Knowledge April 9, 2014 Carmen Nobel |
A Playbook for Small-Business Job Creation Karen Mills left her post as SBA Administrator for a joint fellowship at Harvard to tackle a question she's faced her whole career: How can the United States drive innovation and turn it into jobs? |
The Motley Fool December 4, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
A Wii Dilemma for Sony Nintendo's Wii is a disruptive technology. Can Sony adapt? |
Financial Advisor September 2012 Dennis Stearns |
Measuring Your Life A new book may provide you and your clients with the right tools for a happier life. It's Clayton Christensen's How Will You Measure Your Life? |
Registered Rep. July 30, 2013 David Armstrong |
Editor's Letter: August 2013 Plenty of advisors and others in the industry are skeptical that any of these new-fangled, computer-based financial planning services will ever succeed, and the closing of BloombergBlack will certainly bolster that view. |
The Motley Fool October 21, 2011 John Reeves |
Identifying Innovative Companies A new study identifies five ways that CEOs and executives can get better at innovation. |
HBS Working Knowledge December 31, 2012 |
Most Popular Stories of 2012 This year readers' favorite articles examined topics such as breaking the smartphone addiction, CEO's and their strategies, and how to brand a next-generation product. |
Entrepreneur October 2004 Mark Henricks |
Think Ahead Two books that mean business: One helps you spot the "disruptive innovations" that can make or break your business success. The other tells you how to sell to the 8-12 "tween-age" market. |
BusinessWeek July 23, 2009 |
The SBA's Karen Mills on Thawing Credit How the Administrator of the Small Business Administration says her agency is helping get banks to lend to small business again. |
InternetNews May 5, 2010 |
Google, SBA Offer SMBs New Online Tools The partnership between Google and the Small Business Administration offers training and online tools designed to help small businesses and entrepreneurs. |
CRM June 1, 2007 David Myron |
You Drive Intelligence There is an unfortunate eagerness to view business intelligence as a business panacea. |
Fast Company May 2004 Jena McGregor |
The World Is Their R&D Lab Innovation middlemen try to put inventors and businesses together. It's a way for companies to find great ideas outside their own R&D labs. |
The Motley Fool May 3, 2010 Gregory T. Huang |
Predicting Failure: Testing the "Disruptive Innovation" Model Thomas Thurston is a startup predictor. Tell him about your company, and he'll tell you whether it will survive or fail. |
CIO October 15, 2003 |
Old Questions, Fresh Answers In today's economy, innovation and happiness in the workplace might be viewed as completely irrelevant notions. Here are two books that, refreshingly, beg to differ. |
The Motley Fool January 3, 2012 Brian Stoffel |
Was I Completely Wrong About For-Profit Education? Our analyst takes a second look at the industry's ability to disrupt. |
HBS Working Knowledge April 8, 2009 Deborah Blagg |
Clay Christensen on Disrupting Health Care Professor Clayton Christensen suggests some disruptive innovations that will make health care both more affordable and more effective in the future. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 31, 2014 Sean Silverthorne |
A Scholarly Crowd Explores Crowdsourcing At the Open and User Innovation Workshop, several hundred researchers discussed their work on innovation contests, user-led product improvements, and the biases of crowds. |
Fast Company November 2009 Dan Macsai |
Three Business Models the $38 Billion Newspaper Industry Could Copy Three ideas the $38 billion newspaper industry could copy to buoy its business. |
National Defense January 2007 Johnson & McLaughlin |
To Defeat Terrorists, Military Services Must Innovate, Disrupt By any measure, reforming the half-trillion dollar, 3 million-member Defense Department is one of the largest innovation projects in history. |
HBS Working Knowledge April 8, 2015 James Heskett |
Are Technology Companies Ripe for Disruption? Today's tech products seem stuffed full of features most users don't want -- kindling for igniting Clayton Christensen's disruptive innovation. |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2008 Jill Jusko |
Measured Success: By The Numbers Customer satisfaction is a popular metric by which to gauge the success of innovation efforts. But it's not the only one. |
HBS Working Knowledge April 16, 2008 Deborah Blagg |
Chris Christensen: Legend of the Classroom He was honored for his pioneering work at Harvard Business School in corporate strategy and case-method teaching. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 4, 2013 Carmen Nobel |
Lessons from Running GM's OnStar Before teaching at Harvard Business School, Chet Huber ran the General Motors telematics subsidiary OnStar. Huber discusses how the lessons he learned in the field mesh with the lessons he teaches to students. |
U.S. Banker October 2009 Emily Flitter |
Karen Mills is Big on Small Business The stimulus bill thrust the Small Business Administration back into the spotlight and its new administrator is determined to make sure it stays there. |
CIO December 23, 2008 Jarina D'Auria |
Five Things Judy Estrin Has Learned About Closing the Innovation Gap In her book, Closing the Innovation Gap, former Cisco CTO Judy Estrin shares why CIOs and other leaders must nurture innovation to fend off global competition. |
Entrepreneur June 2004 Mark Henricks |
Fill In the Blanks Rather than selling products you think people ought to buy, put out things they'll actually use. |
InternetNews January 6, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Macromedia Hires Help from Microsoft Former Symbian co-founder Juha Christensen was lured to Macromedia in order to help spread Flash to mobile markets. |
Fast Company January 2001 |
Strategic Reading A reading list that focuses on Internet strategy... |
HBS Working Knowledge August 18, 2008 Martha Lagace |
How Disruptive Innovation Changes Education As an industry, education has certain elements that have made the market difficult to penetrate and lasting reform hard to come by. |
CIO May 15, 2002 Susan H. Cramm |
Strategic Fitness A crash course in strategic planning... |
T.H.E. Journal August 2008 Geoffrey H. Fletcher |
Outside the Comfort Zone Spend time looking into happenings in sectors other than yours, and you may just catch a glimpse into the future of education. |
Entrepreneur October 2007 Joshua Kurlantzick |
Borderline Issues All is quiet on the immigration front - for now. But can small-business owners pull together to help bring about desperately needed changes? |
CIO February 25, 2009 Diann Daniel |
Guy Kawasaki on Innovation and the Myth of Lightning-Bolt Inspiration Power Twitter user, former Mac evangelist, and Alltop cofounder Guy Kawasaki knows a thing or two about innovation. |