Post by account_disabled on Jan 13, 2024 23:38:32 GMT -5
I think part of the difficulty with true innovation-driven growth is that financial markets haven't yet figured out how to price it appropriately. As a result, executives are still dealing with incentives that aren't necessarily aligned with a long-term growth mission. Paul Michelman: That's Rita McGrath. She is the author of the MIT Sloan Management Review article The New Disruptors and a professor at Columbia Business School. Well, kids, it’s time for three takeaways about the new disruptors. First: The original disruption theory has evolved since its creation years ago. Second: Today’s disruptors can become cheap, convenient, and high-quality due to changes in technology and barriers to entry.
Third Incumbents can compete if they stop wasting money building better versions of their analogues. Those are the top three takeaways from this week. You can find us at , , , , , and wherever great podcasts go. If you'd like to support our show, please leave a rating or review on any of your favorite podcast platforms. "Three Key Points" is produced by Mary Du. Music by Matt Reed. marketing and audience Email Lists Database development. Our coordinating producer is. About the organizer is the editor-in-chief of MIT Sloan Management Review. Tags: Business Models Competitive Strategies & Marketing Weekly Review This week’s picks are curated by MIT editors for this week’s must-reads for management in the digital age.
MIT Editor Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Innovation Leadership Disruption Innovation Strategy Crisis Management Ethics Leadership Weekly Review This week’s pick is a roundup of important articles for managers in the digital age, including from MIT Sloan Management Review and Global Content for other publications, curated by MIT editors. More from this series Subscribe Share What to read next The trouble with innovation competitions What are we still getting wrong with performance management? Amy Leshkal Five key trends in artificial intelligence and data science for the year Thomas Davenport and Randy Bean How developers can reduce the impact of artificial intelligence on the climate Sources of interference that every company.
Third Incumbents can compete if they stop wasting money building better versions of their analogues. Those are the top three takeaways from this week. You can find us at , , , , , and wherever great podcasts go. If you'd like to support our show, please leave a rating or review on any of your favorite podcast platforms. "Three Key Points" is produced by Mary Du. Music by Matt Reed. marketing and audience Email Lists Database development. Our coordinating producer is. About the organizer is the editor-in-chief of MIT Sloan Management Review. Tags: Business Models Competitive Strategies & Marketing Weekly Review This week’s picks are curated by MIT editors for this week’s must-reads for management in the digital age.
MIT Editor Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Innovation Leadership Disruption Innovation Strategy Crisis Management Ethics Leadership Weekly Review This week’s pick is a roundup of important articles for managers in the digital age, including from MIT Sloan Management Review and Global Content for other publications, curated by MIT editors. More from this series Subscribe Share What to read next The trouble with innovation competitions What are we still getting wrong with performance management? Amy Leshkal Five key trends in artificial intelligence and data science for the year Thomas Davenport and Randy Bean How developers can reduce the impact of artificial intelligence on the climate Sources of interference that every company.