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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. |
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. |
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. |
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? |
HBS Working Knowledge February 25, 2013 Carmen Nobel |
Lean Strategy Not Just for Start-Ups Established companies often experience innovation stagnation. The fix, says Intuit founder Scott Cook, is for these companies to adopt a lean start-up model. |
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. |
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. |
Fast Company October 2005 Jena McGregor |
Listener Runner-up: Intuit Intuit has many ears, open to the Voice of the Customer. |
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. |
Inc. April 1, 2004 Michael S. Hopkins |
Scott Cook - Intuit Cook is the founder of Intuit, the company that brought you the personal and business financial tools Quicken and Quickbooks. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 10, 2003 Taylor & Schroeder |
How a New CEO Re-energized Intuit Steve Bennett took over Intuit in 2000, quickly diagnosing an underperforming company. This excerpt from the new book Inside Intuit shows how the GE veteran took command. |
PC Magazine August 17, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
The Myth of Disruptive Technology When there is true disruption, it comes from inventions, regulatory and social change, complementary technologies, coincidence, and demand. |
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. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 9, 2009 Christensen, Grossman & Hwang |
How to Revive Health-Care Innovation Simple solutions to complex problems lead to breakthroughs in industries from retailing to personal computers to printing. So let's try health care, too. |
Inc. November 1, 2009 Scott Cook |
Scott Cook of Intuit on Product Innovation The key, says Intuit's founder, is to get everyone involved. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
How Intuit Found Fame and Fortune, and Beat Out Microsoft In a new book Inside Intuit: How the Makers of Quicken Beat Microsoft and Revolutionized an Entire Industry, Suzanne Taylor and Kathy Shroeder recount the 20-year history of Intuit. |
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. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 6, 2003 Jim Heskett |
Is "the Innovator's Solution" to Sustained Corporate Growth an Unnatural Act? Long-term growth and profitability are elusive targets for many organizations. The former often is more difficult to achieve than the latter, especially for companies competing in "mature" markets. This presents a problem for today's manager to the degree that investors reward growth more than profitability. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 3, 2003 Baker Library Staff |
HBS Entrepreneurs in Their Own Words The experiences and wisdom of twenty-seven leading entrepreneurs are captured on a new Web page from Harvard Business School. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 23, 2012 Emmons et al. |
Five Ways to Make Your Company More Innovative Five Harvard Business School faculty experts in culture, customers, creativity, marketing, and the DNA of innovators offer surprising advice. |
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. |
The Motley Fool June 3, 2010 Jennifer Schonberger |
The Future of Innovation in America Innovation experts like Clayton Christensen imply that America is being outinnovated by other countries. |
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. |
The Motley Fool October 15, 2009 Mac Greer |
Will Apple Lose Its Edge? Disruptive innovation expert Clay Christensen talks movers and shakers. |
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. |
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. |
The Motley Fool September 27, 2010 Anders Bylund |
DOJ Wins Against Silicon Valley, but What's the Point? Silicon Valley giants are free to cold-call one another again for hiring. Was that ever a real problem? |
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. |
HBS Working Knowledge September 4, 2007 Lynda M. Applegate |
Jumpstarting Innovation: Using Disruption to Your Advantage Jumpstarting innovation is a critical business imperative. Executives realize that radical change is needed but do not feel equipped to make such change. |
The Motley Fool November 4, 2011 Molly McCluskey |
1 Stock to Buy Today You may trust Intuit to handle your finances, but should you trust it in your portfolio? |