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(Hardcover)
Building a New Business within a Profitable Old One
Even world-class companies, with powerful and proven business models, eventually discover limits to growth. That's what makes emerging high-growth industries so attractive. Although they lack a proven formula for making a profit, these industries represent huge opportunities for the companies that are fast enough and smart enough.
But constructing tomorrow's businesses while simultaneously sustaining excellence in today's demands a delicate balance. It is a quest fraught with contradiction and paradox. Until now, there has been little practical guidance.
Based on an in-depth, multiyear research study of innovative initiatives at ten large corporations, Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble identify three central challenges: forgetting yesterday's successful processes and practices; borrowing selected resources from the core business; and learning how the new business can succeed. The authors make recommendations regarding staffing, leadership roles, reporting relationships, process design, planning, performance assessment, incentives, cultural norms, and much more.
Breakthrough growth opportunities can make or break companies and careers. Ten Rules for Strategic Innovators is every leader's guide to execution in unexplored territory.
Author Bio: Vijay Govindarajan is the Earl C. Daum 1924 Professor of International Business at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. Chris Trimble is an adjunct associate professor at Tuck and a senior fellow at Katzenbach Partners, LLC. The authors direct the William F. Achtmeyer Center for Global Leadership.
Ten Rules for Strategic Innovators: From Idea to Execution is the best book we've seen on the '"how-tos" of creating an innovative new business, and thus the single best strategic book of the year.
More Reviews and RecommendationsReader Rating:
April 19, 2007: As opposed to offering a simple guide to innovation, Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble do something less common, and they do it well: They analyze the institutional structures which allow, nurture and support innovation. They explain how to open new innovation-focused divisions in your organization, how to think about learning and how to evaluate such new projects (and, perhaps more importantly, how not to evaluate them). They share case studies of established companies' successful and failed attempts to sprout innovative offshoots. The results are very level-headed. The authors are quite clear about the obstacles to institutional innovation, planning and learning in uncharted waters. We expect that this book could help you sail through.
Reader Rating:
April 02, 2006: As a manager building a new business within an existing company, I am running into many challenges. VG and Chris utilize real world situations to highlight these challenges, and offer practical ideas and frameworks to address them. I first read the book to get a perspective on other, similar situations, and then re-read it to find ideas to apply, and now turn back to it as a continual reference. From Forget, Borrow, Learn to the Theory Focused Planning to the 10 Lessons themselves, there is a wealth of knowledge and experience they share. Many books talk about finding the innovative idea. 10 Rules for Strategic Innovators actually helps outline how to turn the idea into a new, viable commercial business. This book is unique and a truly great read.