Wednesday, May 8, 2013

HBR's 10 Must Reads on Innovation

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HBR's 10 Must Reads on Innovation Harvard Business Review
HBR'S 10 MUST READS ON INNOVATION
If you need the best practices and ideas for creating and delivering new products and services—but don't have time to find them—this book is for you. We've combed through hundreds of Harvard Business Review articles and selected the most important ones to help you take your business into the future—the right way. This collection of HBR articles will help you:
Decide which ideas are worth pursuing
Adapt offerings from the developing world to wealthy markets
Plan all-new ventures by testing and tweaking
Tailor your efforts to meet customers' most pressing needs
Make inexpensive products on a vast scale
Measure and improve innovation performance
Avoid classic pitfalls such as stifling innovation with rigid processes
Save more than 60% off the price of the individual articles when you buy this collection.
All 10 must-read articles are yours for only $24.95!*
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HBR's 10 Must Reads on Innovation
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HBR's 10 Must Reads on Innovation includes:
Innovation's Holy Grail
by C.K. Prahalad and R.A. Mashelkar
As you innovate for today's customers, focus on affordability and sustainability. Indian companies lead the way with a $2,000 car, a penny's worth of phone time, and other disruptive offerings.
Stop the Innovation Wars
by Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble
Partner your innovative upstarts with protectors of your core business. Together, they'll drum up great ideas that work.
How GE Is Disrupting Itself
by Jeffrey R. Immelt, Vijay Govindarajan, and Chris Trimble
To stay in the global innovation game, it's not enough to create products for a rich home market and adapt them abroad. You also need to do the reverse: innovate for developing markets and tailor the offerings for wealthy ones, as GE did with portable ultrasounds.
The Customer-Centered Innovation Map
by Lance A. Bettencourt and Anthony W. Ulwick
Break down the jobs customers need to get done into discrete steps—and create products and services that make those jobs easier, faster, or unnecessary.
The Innovation Value Chain
by Morten T. Hansen and Julian Birkinshaw
Need to improve your company's innovation processes, but not sure where to start? This framework will help you find and fix the weak links.
Is It Real? Can We Win? Is It Worth Doing?
by George S. Day
Innovate too cautiously, and you risk strangling growth. Here's how to screen big, risky projects for profitability and competitive advantage.
Innovation: The Classic Traps
by Rosabeth Moss Kanter
Most companies keep repeating the same innovation mistakes, like setting unrealistic performance targets and overlooking small but profitable ideas. Avoid these errors—and turn ideas into market successes.
Discovery-Driven Planning
by Rita Gunther McGrath and Ian C. MacMillan
Launching a new venture? Use this process to uncover, test, and revise your guiding assumptions so you can prevent failure—or at least fail cheaply and learn from the experiment.
The Discipline of Innovation
by Peter F. Drucker
Want to lead your company to brilliant ideas that pay off in the marketplace? Inspiration alone won't get you there. It also takes careful analysis of opportunities in key areas, such as new technical knowledge and industry changes.
Innovation Killers: How Financial Tools Destroy Your Capacity to Do
New Things
by Clayton M. Christensen, Stephen P. Kaufman, and Willy C. Shih
Misguided financial analysis may be stifling your company's innovation efforts. Here's how to avoid making bad calls about investments' value and potential for success.
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