Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary National Bestseller That Changed the Way We Do Business by Clayton M. Christensen

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  • Pub. Date: May 2000
  • 320pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2000
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Paperback, 320pp

    Synopsis

    In his cut-to-the-core wake-up call to all businesspeople, Christensen proves that even the greatest companies can be destroyed by new technologies. According to a recent Forbes cover story, The Innovator's Dilemma ought to chill any executive who feels bulletproof -- and inspire entrepreneurs aiming their guns."

    Annotation

    Sharp, cogent, and provocative, The Innovator's Dilemma is one of the most talked about business books of our time -- and something that none of today's executives will dare to be without.

    Forbes

    This book ought to chill any executive who feels bulletproof - and inspire entrepreneurs aiming their guns.

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    Biography

    Clayton M. Christensen is an associate professor of business administration at the Harvard Business School, where he holds a joint appointment with the Technology and Operations Management and General Management faculty groups. His research and writing focus on the management of technological innovation, the problems in finding new markets for new technologies, and the identification and development of organizational capabilities. Prior to joining the Harvard Business School faculty, Professor Christensen served as Chairman and President of Ceramics Process Systems Corporations, a firm he co-founded in 1984 with several MIT professors. He also served as a White House Fellow and as a member of the staff of the Boston Consulting Group. He is the author or co-author of numerous articles in journals such as Research Policy, Strategic Management Journal, Industrial and Corporate Change, the Business History Review, and the Harvard Business Review.

    Customer Reviews

    Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary National Bestseller That Changed the Way We Do Businessby Anonymous

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    May 02, 2002: Great book. Highly recommended reading on why large technology companies are often unable to win against startups.

    Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary National Bestseller That Changed the Way We Do Businessby Anonymous

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    April 01, 2001: Professor Christensen is a Boston Consulting Group alum, as am I, and that firm has been very interested in the question of why dominant firms lose out to new entrants featuring innovative technologies. Professor Christensen has written the best work on this subject that it has been my pleasure to read. Unlike most academics, he is rigorous without being dull or irrelevant to those who must operate businesses. I particularly found his exploration of the differences between a sustaining and a disruptive technology to be very useful. His insights into how accounting and financial concerns can 'stall' organizational progress were also valuable. From the perspective of an organization seeking a 2,000 percent solution (a way to get 20 times the results with the same resources or the same results 20 times faster), his cases (especially the hard disk ones) accurately capture many of the classic 'stalls' that delay organizational progress. For example, tradition says that everyone focuses on serving the current customers. That's where the bread and butter are. Also, the overhead structure is established to serve those current needs. Both perspectives no longer serve when a disruptive technology is involved, and he persuasively argues that being first with disruptive technologies is very important. Bureaucracy comes into play because the authorization process requires a lot of confidence by those who will bet their careers that the market and financial projections will be achieved. The bureaucracy also increases the likelihood that an error will be made, or an unnecessary delay will occur. Disbelief comes from the tendency to misdefine who the customers will be and to underestimate the long-term potential of the technology. Professor Christensen puts in some nice technology development/time charts in to show how to better anticipate a new technology expanding from a lower need-defined market into the mainstream market. Misconception comes in because people misunderstand the danger of the disruptive technology, and how to manage it. THE INNOVATOR'S DILEMMA is very hepful here because it provides a model of best practices to cure the misconception stall here. Three other stalls are often important: Procrastination (delaying when delay is costly); Ugly Ducklings (avoiding what is unattractive, physically or financially); and Communications (not getting the message or not understanding the message). I suspect all 3 play a big role in the cases here, but I could not tell from the way the cases were written. I hope in his future work, Professor Christensen will also tie his thinking into the idea of innovation itself. I personally favor an 8 step process. One, measure everything you can in an area to understand how the measurements can help you improve. Two, apply the same approach to your most important activities. Be sure to consider how and why noncustomers do not find your offerings appealing. Three, seek out the best practices in other industries in these important activities, and estimate where these best practices will be in five years. Four, assemble a new combination of best practices from these cases that goes beyond what any one company will be doing in five years. Five, imagine the best that anyone will ever be able to do, ever, as the ideal best practice. In the case of disruptive technologies this would involve spotting them well in advance and being able to pursue them without pain to the rest of the organization, and pursuing very...


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