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Resources DetailsTitle: Who`s bringing you hot ideas and how are you responding-[Periodical]Publisher: Boulder:Harvard Business Review,2003Notes: There`s an unsung hero in your organization. It`s the person who`s bringing in new ideas from the outside about how to manage better. This is the manager who, for instance, first uttered the phrase ""balanced scorecard"" in your hallways, or ""real options,"" or ""intellectual capital."" Managerial innovation is an increasingly important source of competitive advantage--especially given the speed with which product innovations are copied--but it doesn`t happen automatically. It takes a certain kind of person to welcome new management ideas and usher them into an organization. The authors recently studied 100 such people to find out how they translate new ideas into action in their organizations. ""Idea practitioners,"" as the authors call them, begin by scouting for ideas. All of them are avid readers of management literature and enthusiastic participants in business conferences; many are friendly with business gurus. Once they`ve identified an idea that seems to hold promise, they tailor it to fit their organizations` specific needs. Next, they actively sell the idea--to senior executives, to the rank and file, to middle managers. And finally, they get the ball rolling by participating in small-scale experiments. But when those take off, they get out of the way and let others execute. In this article, the authors identify the characteristics of idea practitioners and offer strategies for managing them wisely. >> More |
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"Most extant knowledge management systems are constrained by their overly rational, static and acontextual view of knowledge. Effectiveness of such systems is constrained by the rapid and discontinuous change that characterizes new organizational environments." - Yogesh Malhotra |
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