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Rita McGrath
May, 15,2013
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In my soon-to-be-published book The End of Competitive Advantage:  How to Keep Your Strategy Moving as Fast as Your Business, (to be published June 4th) I argue that many of the strategic and management processes we inherited from a more stable strategic time simply don't work as environments become more volatile and uncertain.  What I'm starting to look at now is how other institutions, beyond business, have made the assumption that businesses will be around for long periods of time and therefore are to be relied upon to tackle certain societal tasks.  As advantages become short and companies struggle to cope, they are renegotiating many of these tasks in ways that I'm not sure we are paying enough attention to.

Gabor George Burt
May, 03,2013
Expert on innovation, creativity and strategy
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Over time, customers acquire certain perceptions which influence their emotional response to new offerings. By recognizing such perceptions, you can position your offering so as to have the best likelihood of infatuating customers.

Rita McGrath
May, 03,2013
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I’ve been researching what allows companies to be successful, even when their competitive advantages are short-lived. One that came to my attention is the Regus Group, Ltd., a company that provides many services but is best-known for its offices-for-rent business.

Regus first came to my attention when I met Rudy Lobo, their Chief Operating Officer. He’s a man in a hurry. Intense and energetic, he tells me that he is finally considering establishing a permanent home in a semi-rural part of England after “thirty moves in thirty years.”  All that momentum is not accidental.  Lobo’s company is one of many that I’ve been studying whose leaders seem comfortable that their current competitive advantages won’t last, and don’t waste too much time clinging on to them once competitors have caught up or the moment has passed.

Felice Physioc
Apr, 12,2013
Journalist WOBI.com
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Strategy is a topic that is sometimes hard to grasp, and to create and execute a successful one is an on-going challenge for many companies. This year proves to be no different, as the economy begins to improve a little, but with clear challenges ahead in terms of expanding to new markets, reaching different customers, and driving innovation in a world where everyone considers innovation the big strategic advantage.

How can you create a strategy that considers all of these diverse challenges, and remains true to your company’s vision? In the following WOBI Ranking we reveal the top 5 strategic challenges to expect this year, and how to best prepare yourself and your business to successfully overcome them.   

Gabor George Burt
Apr, 04,2013
Expert on innovation, creativity and strategy
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Are you simply imitating your competitors or only seeking an incremental advantage over them?  Why not sidestep them altogether, by focusing on what customers really want?  By understanding and maximizing how your offering creates lifestyle enrichment, you can do just that. 

Gabor George Burt
Mar, 21,2013
Expert on innovation, creativity and strategy
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The opossum is a strange animal.  Its principal line of defense against potential predators is feigning death.  While an ingenious and innovative psychological deterrent, this has at least two significant risks if not followed up by subsequent innovations. 

First, it banks on predators’ tastes not changing over time.  But what if a stiff, carcass-like appearance eventually becomes an appetite enhancer and not suppressant for savage beasts? 

Marcelo Tedesco
Mar, 21,2013
Expert in strategic planning and business transformation
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Recently, the CEO of Yahoo!, Marissa Mayer, announced that starting in June all the collaborators working remotely must return to working in an office, the reason being: "To become the absolute best place to work, communication and collaboration will be important, so we need to be working side-by-side. That is why it is critical that we are all present in our offices," said Mayer.

The turmoil unleashed by such a decision has been deafening, not just within the company, which has one of the largest at-home workforces, but also in the business world.

Sir Richard Branson was shocked by the decision, to the point of posting on his Twitter account the following comment: "Perplexed by Yahoo! stopping remote working. Give people the freedom of where to work & they will excel.”

Viviana Alonso
Mar, 11,2013
Editor WOBI TV
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Extracted from WOBI magazine, V18N1

For the first time in history since the industrial revolution, there seems to be a rupture between business and society, a distancing between corporations and people. Michael Porter, the celebrated strategy guru, understands that companies are no longer faced with the traditional management challenges that he has in the past helped solve, but are now in an entirely new situation with distinct issues.

“Years ago, at least in the U.S., companies were a place that people wanted to be,” comments Porter. “This has been lost. The idea that companies exist to maximize profits for their shareholders isn’t attractive anymore. When benefits are lost, jobs are limited and salaries cut, and society began to question corporations. So the corporate world will have to change their mentality, sketch out new theories, establish new brands of reference to better understand these problems, and be aware of what is going on internally and externally.” Porter has made a contribution to this change, a term he has coined as “shared value”.

Marcelo Tedesco
Feb, 26,2013
Expert in strategic planning and business transformation
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A few years ago I witnessed a conversation that could have been heard in a coffee shop, but it actually happened in the office of the Regional Vice President of one of the world’s largest conglomerates.

-Why do companies exist? Asked the VP to the executive.

-To make money, he answered.

The answer seemed like it was straight out of a textbook on orthodox capitalism.

Surely the question and answer are familiar to you, because we consciously and unconsciously think about it all the time. You might have even heard other similar conversations as well.

So do companies really exist just to produce money? Could the capitalist model with all its failures really have survived all this time if this really was the objective?

Monique Reece
Feb, 14,2013
Author, Speaker, Founder of MarketSmarter
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Companies both small and large depend on distribution channels to sell products and services, and for some, it is their key differentiating strategy.  Selling through a channel other than a direct sales team provides companies with the opportunity to increase revenue and market share, expand into new markets, and capture new customers. Companies can sell to, or sell through, many different types of channels; this post will focus on how to establish and nurture strategic alliances and partnerships to grow your business.

Strategic alliances, also known as strategic partnerships (legal teams often refrain from using the word “partnership”) should be approached with a similar rigor as other channels, but too many businesses take a more passive approach with strategic partners than they do other types of channels. Investing time and resources early in the relationship to establish a mutually beneficial partnership will greatly increase the odds of creating a successful, long-term relationship.