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I like this book because it brings out the value if business process and converges ideas and concepts that are often explored separately.
solid examples from India and US that exemplify the future of business innovation: co-creation of personalized experience, melting of hardware software and services into 1. nice mathematical like acronym N=1, R=G.
Whole book could have been written in 10 pages. Unnecessarily dragged to 250 pages.
American English is not the author's native language, which makes this book difficult. However, there are a ton of great ideas in this book. The only problem, most businesses that can afford them are too bureaucratic to implement them.
http://www.anureviews.com/the-new-age...
A brilliant book on the new business paradigm. Highly insightful and new insights.
It did present some interesting ideas about the future of innovation and how companies will be organized in the future. The whole idea of N=1 and R=G seems to be pretty valid. I see companies moving that way, but I don't think that all of them will or can.I think he rambled on a little too long. The concluding chapter wasn't all that bad, and I think it expressed his main points pretty well. That chapter could have been the whole book and you wouldn't miss much. However, the other chapters did h...
Worth of reading, with few new and inspiring views. Mayby slightly missleading title, as this discusses more about business models and how to fullfil single customer needs with global resources.
C.K. Prahalad has been described as one of he most influential management theorists in the world, and perhaps because of that, I expected more from this book on innovation in 21st century business. At its heart however, this book really comes down to just one major insight, which Prahalad and his co-author M.S. Krishnan explore from a number of different angles. Nonetheless, the concept is an interesting one and I still enjoyed the book.The idea at the core of the book is simply this: The author...
Some great ideas, but as others mentioned, the book gets quite "rambling" after a certain point. I actually ended up skipping large chunks of it because of a lack of a strong tone and repetitive ideas. If you want a quick, effective read with the same concept, I suggest "free prize inside" by Seth Godin
I got this book in 2014 from an intensive five-month program in which Prof. Krishnan, one of the co-authors, was a coach.This book focuses on the new concepts of value creation - building organizational capabilities to co-create unique experienceswith customers, one at a time (N=1); and by utilizing global network of resources (R=G). Resilient business processes andfocused analytics are defined as the glue to transform ideas into competitive operations by linking technical architecture (informat...
Very Good