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The objective of the ISO 56002 standard is to provide a framework
on how to build an innovation ecosystem that can be sustained over
time. Similar to the quality management system that ISO established
decades ago, this standard provides instructions related to best
practices on how to establish an Innovative Management System
within an organization. However, it does not provide guidance on
how to implement and/or use the standard. The ISO Standard 56004
Innovation Management Assessment was designed to g define the
maturity level of an organization's Innovation Management System.
The primary purpose of most Innovative Management Systems is to
process a continuous flow of new and highly creative outputs that
will meet external customers’ needs and expectations. The users
of ISO 56002 and 56004 know that they are "what to do" documents --
This book, however, shows you how to do it! Both ISO Standard 56002
and 56004 are focused on improving the organization's innovative
management system. This book focuses on how to train employees on
how to use the system to add value to the organization’s
stakeholders. There are no books out on the subject -- this book
greatly assists managers, business leaders, entrepreneurs, and
consultants seeking help in using the innovation management system
effectively and efficiently. Essentially, this book presents an
effective marriage between the innovative management system and how
it will operate when it becomes part of the operating procedures.
The objective of the ISO 56002 standard is to provide a framework
on how to build an innovation ecosystem that can be sustained over
time. Similar to the quality management system that ISO established
decades ago, this standard provides instructions related to best
practices on how to establish an Innovative Management System
within an organization. However, it does not provide guidance on
how to implement and/or use the standard. The ISO Standard 56004
Innovation Management Assessment was designed to g define the
maturity level of an organization's Innovation Management System.
The primary purpose of most Innovative Management Systems is to
process a continuous flow of new and highly creative outputs that
will meet external customers’ needs and expectations. The users
of ISO 56002 and 56004 know that they are "what to do" documents --
This book, however, shows you how to do it! Both ISO Standard 56002
and 56004 are focused on improving the organization's innovative
management system. This book focuses on how to train employees on
how to use the system to add value to the organization’s
stakeholders. There are no books out on the subject -- this book
greatly assists managers, business leaders, entrepreneurs, and
consultants seeking help in using the innovation management system
effectively and efficiently. Essentially, this book presents an
effective marriage between the innovative management system and how
it will operate when it becomes part of the operating procedures.
Total Quality in Marketing integrates the two areas of marketing and quality management and demonstrates how they are mutually compatible and complementary. Its primary focus is to assist managers in applying total quality principles to the overall marketing management process-preparing for a more highly competitive marketplace. Practical guidelines and processes are offered on how quality initiatives impact planning, organization, implementation, and quality control.
This unique and valuable book presents a systems approach to quality-how to operationalize in the context of both the management and marketing cycles. It demonstrates how to establish effective team-based practices as well as describes the pitfalls of quality programs that are introduced as stand-alone programs without any linkage to overall strategy. This useful new book serves as a teaching tool and comprehensive reference source for integrating total quality. Case studies, exercises and chapter profiles also provide excellent support materials.
The innovation infrastructure and master plan described in this
book offers a detailed and comprehensive approach to one of the
most difficult and challenging problems facing entrepreneurs
involved in innovation at any scale enterprise: the problem of how
to govern your organization's innovation initiatives in the middle
of turbulent change. Progress in any field requires the development
of a framework, a structure that organizes the accumulating
knowledge, enables people to master it, and unifies the key
discoveries into a set of principles that makes them understandable
and actionable. For starters, successful innovation requires an
integrated design process, beginning with integration in the design
of the enterprise, the design of the product, along with the design
and implementation of new technologies. Such an integrated design
effort requires good collaboration and management of the design
framework, and should be supported by efficient knowledge
management techniques and tools; If innovation is to help a
business grow and improve its competitiveness, it is also important
to plan the innovation carefully. This book provides a holistic,
multidisciplinary framework that will enable your organization and
its leaders to take a strategic approach to innovation. The
framework combines non-traditional, creative approaches to business
innovation with conventional strategy development models. The
framework model brings together perspectives from many
complementary disciplines: the non-traditional approaches to
innovation found in the business creativity movement;
multiple-source strategy consulting; the new product development
perspective of many leading industrial design firms; qualitative
consumer/customer research; future-based research found in think
tanks and traditional scenario planning; and organizational
development (OD) practices that examine the effectiveness of an
organization's culture, processes, and structure. Though some ideas
may just "fall from the sky" or "come out of the blue", an
organization should also have a strategic vision of how the
business and the enterprise will successfully develop. It should
not just wait for the innovation to arrive arbitrarily, but rather
proactively plan for innovation incorporating market trends, the
competitive landscape, new technology availability, and changes in
customer preferences and trends in order to create a flexible
in-house innovation process. Such an enterprise will also
pro-actively manage the knowledge supply chain that supports
innovation, as outlined in this book #7 of Management Handbook for
Results series. The framework outlined in this handbook consists of
a well-integrated cohesive set of practices that inspires
imaginative innovation teams to look beyond the obvious and explore
a broad range of possibilities to identify significant
opportunities and make informed decisions about the most promising
paths to pursue. The goal is to create a shared vision for growth,
along with defining pragmatic action plans that bridge from the
future back to the present, while attempting to align the
organization around the requirements for success.
Change Management: Manage Change or It Will Manage You represents a
substantial core guidance effort for Change Management
practitioners. Organizations currently contend with increasingly
higher levels of knowledge-driven competition. Many attempt to meet
the challenge by investing in expensive knowledge-driven change
management systems. Such systems are useless, and sometimes even
harmful, for making strategic decisions because they do not
distinguish between what is strategically relevant and what is not.
This Management-for-Results Handbook focuses on identifying and
managing the specific, critical knowledge assets that your
organization needs to disrupt your competitors, including tacit
experience of key employees, a deep understanding of customers
needs, valuable patents and copyrights, shared industry practices,
and customer- and supplier-generated innovations. The authors
present two aspects of Change Management: (1) traditional Change
Management as it impacts the project management team's activities
and (2) a suggested new approach to Change Management directed at
changing the culture. The focus is to prepare the people impacted
by the project and change activities to accept and adapt to the
new/changed working conditions. The first half of the book deals
with traditional Change Management, which covers the topics of
remembering, understanding, and applying. The second half presents
the authors new approach to changing the culture, which deals with
analyzing, evaluating, and creating.
Presenting an unusual and unique system for Continuous Quality
Improvement (CQI), this new book is geared for executives who want
or need to support quality improvement in their organizations. It
is the contributions made by CEO's and upper management that moves
the quality process forward, and because of this structure, The
Executive Guide to Implementing Quality focuses on the concepts,
thinking, and systems necessary for management to operationalize
the CQI philosophy. Because quality is not a management problem but
rather a problem that involves and requires all people working
together at all levels to participate and cooperate, management
must engage the organization in the processes that will improve the
quality of their goods or services. It is, however, management's
job to lead, organize, structure, motivate, and involve the
organization in those strategies and systems that will ensure
quality improvement. This book explains how to do that. Readers are
given a series of exercises and explanations that will help them
master the skills and understanding required to identify the
management systems they need to support their quality improvement.
After reading about a concept, they are asked to contribute to
exercises designed to inspire creative and innovative thinking and
the exploration of multi-functional options. And because it is the
job of management to initiate the quality movement, this book shows
how to change defensive thoughts like "that won't work for me" into
"what is there that will work here." In addition to showing
management how to take the lead in installing CQI in their
organization, it also shows how to install the concepts through
leadership teams, how to bring out the best in people, how to get
top performance from employees and become a world-class
organization, and how to reinforce the behaviors necessary to
achieve the visions and goals of the organization. This workbook is
an easy-and-quick-to-use guide that shows how to ident
Macrologistics Management defines the term "Macrologistics" as a
means for designing a catalyst for change in any organization. The
"macro" approach means seeing the big picture-to use time and place
strategies for competitive advantage. It is a "breakthrough"
strategy because it prioritizes "logistics" selection as a key
factor in developing customer satisfaction and market penetration.
Traditional management approaches the product and cost savings as
key factors in their strategy. This book demonstrates how new
approaches can be even more effective and more profitable-it will
help you achieve complete transformation in your organization
through a systematic process for managing change and by using
carefully prioritized change management strategies. The framework
for change, as explained in this book, is one where continuous
monitoring is facilitated by a relevant and responsive information
system, workers and managers are empowered and rewarded for
innovation, and leaders encourage a passion for change. With
Macrologistics Management you will learn how to unleash new sources
of synergy-ways for various groups involved with the organization
to work together-that help promote creativity and motivate an
effective and rapid revolution in your workplace!
The best time to stop projects or programs that will not be
successful is before they are ever started. Research has shown that
the focused use of realistic business case analysis on proposed
initiatives could enable your organization to reduce the amount of
project waste and churn (rework) by up to 40 percent, potentially
avoiding millions of dollars lost on projects, programs, and
initiatives that would fail to produce the desired results. This
book illustrates how to develop a strong business case which links
investments to program results and, ultimately, with the strategic
outcomes of the organization. In addition, the book provides a
template and example case studies for those seeking to fast-track
the development of a business case within their organization.Making
the Case for Change: Using Effective Business Cases to Minimize
Project and Innovation Failures provides executive teams and change
agents with the information required to make better business case
decisions. This book can be used throughout the life cycle of the
project to assist with gaining a better understanding of the
following key knowledge areas for developing a business case:
Understanding the present problem/improvement opportunity
Documenting how the project, program, or initiative will add value
to the organization Validating the data and the assumptions that
the projected improvements are based upon Calculating the level of
confidence that can be placed upon the conclusions that are reached
Assessing the alternative solutions that were considered Weighing
the costs vs. the benefits of the proposed initiative Analyzing and
mitigating the risks to completing 100 percent of the project's
goals Eliciting and prioritizing the requirements of key
stakeholders and subject matter experts Identifying the key people
that are involved in the proposed project and the skil
In today's fast-moving, high-technology environment, the focus on
quality has given way to a focus on innovation. From presidents of
the United States to presidents of Fortune 500 companies, it is
clear that everyone thinks innovation is extremely important. The
challenge is that few people stop to define why innovation is
important-to understand what's driving the need for more
innovation. We all agree that more frequent innovation is
important, even necessary. There is actually a growing body of
evidence that indicates that looking outside of your company
(rather than purely looking internally) and to customers' needs,
using the tools in this Handbook, will lead to more innovative
ideas. Responding to customers' needs is the key to a successful
business. You can use these tools to talk to customers-satisfied
ones, unsatisfied ones, potential customers, people who would never
buy your product or service, and also people you have never
considered as a potential customer. In addition, these tools will
help you ask your competitors' customers about what makes them
happy with the current businesses and offerings in the industry,
why they buy or do not buy from you, your competitors, and other
industries. These tools will help you understand the steps in the
customer journey they need to take, what delights and frustrates
them, and what their pain points are. The three volumes of The
Innovation Tools Handbook cover 76 top-rated tools and methods,
from the hundreds available, that every innovator must master to be
successful. Covering evolutionary and/or improvement innovative
tools and methodologies, Volume 2 presents 23 tools/methodologies
related to innovative evolutionary products, processes, and
services, or the improvement of existing ones. For each tool, the
book provides a definition, identifies the user of the tool,
explains what phases of the innovation process the tool is used,
describes how the tool is used, supplies examples of the outputs
from the tool, identifies software that can maximize its
effectiveness, and includes references and suggestions for further
reading. Ideation is about developing ideas on how to seize
identified opportunities. What are the possible answers to your
breakthrough questions? Having a deep understanding about the
customer, their needs and pain points, as well as the existing
solutions (i.e. business models in the industry) will naturally
lead to new ideas. How seriously you do your discovery homework
using the tools in these Handbooks will determine not only how fast
you create ideas, but about how likely these ideas are to succeed.
Tools and methodologies covered include: 5 why questions, Affinity
diagrams, attribute listing, brainwriting 6-3-5, cause-and-effect
diagrams, creative problem solving model, design for tools,
flowcharting, force field analysis, Kano analysis, nominal group
technique, plan-do-check-act, reengineering/redesign, reverse
engineering, robust design, SCAMPER, simulations, six thinking
hats, social networks, solution analysis diagrams, statistical
analysis, tree diagram, and value analysis. The authors believe
that by making effective use of the tools and methodologies
presented in this book, your organization can increase the
percentage of creative/innovative ideas by five to eight times its
present performance level.
In the same way that a well-defined approach is needed to develop
an effective strategic plan, an equally well-designed approach is
needed to support the alignment of your organization's structure,
management concepts, systems, processes, networks, knowledge nets,
training, hiring, and reward systems. Examining top-down,
bottom-up, and core planning and execution processes, The
Organizational Alignment Handbook: A Catalyst for Performance
Acceleration provides a systematic approach for establishing the
infrastructure needed to support a successful transformation and
make your strategic plan a reality. Bridging the gap between macro
and micro approaches with a single unified theory, the book
provides the understanding needed to assess the effectiveness of
your organization's current management system. It explains how to
identify potential projects, introduce new practices, plan for
resource allocation, and define and recommend decision governance.
Identifying the capability constraints you must resolve in order
for your company to thrive in an increasingly competitive business
environment, the book explains: How the organizational master plan
fits into alignment activities How strategic planning process and
outcomes can be made part of the performance plan for individuals
How to use controllable factors as the foundation for your master
plan How to develop a set of vision statements that defines how
your organization will function in the future The management skills
your organization currently possesses might be effective in today's
environment, but are they the skills needed to meet strategic
objectives in the future? This book outlines a step-by-step
approach for achieving organization-wide alignment of processes,
applications, and systems, and to ensure acceptance of the results
by all stakeholders. It includes examples of organizations
implementing the strategies discussed as well as a review of the
activities you need to follow to minimize the time it takes to
reach your performance objectives today and in the future.
Currently, the prime focus for US business plans should not be on
the manufacturing process design and delivery processes, but on
greatly improving innovation leadership, design engineering
capability, and sales and marketing innovation. These three areas
have been sadly lacking significant performance improvement during
the past 20 years. The magic word for US business is
"simplification." Most of the books written to date focus on the
solution development aspect of the Innovation System Cycle, which
is less than 15% of the total innovative system. Focusing on
solution development is only the start -- the rest of the
innovation system cycle is what turns an idea into a profitable
business. The techniques in this book are directed at key tasks
across the innovative process, such as maximizing quality,
productivity, maintainability, usability, and reliability, while
focusing on reducing the product cycle time and costs within the
innovative process. This book uses more than 50 different
approaches/concepts, which leads the reader in a very simple method
for understanding, establishing, and effectively using an
innovative system to provide a significant marketing advantage.
Previous books have focused on what to do; however, this book
focuses on how to do it. It transforms a complicated complex system
into easy-to-use and understand methodology.
Dr. H. James Harrington and Frank Voehl have gathered together the
thoughts and ideas of more than 20 of the most creative innovation
thought leaders from business, professional practice, and academia
in this compelling book. The thought leaders look at innovation
from almost every angle - their statements offer an unparalleled
view of innovation and provide a depth of insight that is
extraordinary. Harrington and Voehl's reflection on each chapter,
and on the sections within the book, provides useful links between
themes and reinforces the relationships between many of the ideas.
Anyone interested in innovation (practitioner or researcher) will
benefit from this global thought collection. The contributors'
multiple perspectives, models, practical examples, and stories
provide a sense of innovation that no single writer could ever
capture. A company's future growth will only come through
successful innovation. This book is organized around Dr.
Harrington's innovation pyramid, which consists of the 16 building
blocks required to bring about significant improvements in an
organization's ability to deliver creative products. It highlights
the principles and recommendations in ISO's new innovation standard
56002 and provides many new concepts that are not included in the
standard. It includes a free, powerful, and valuable online
customized innovation maturity analysis. Following three
unassailable facts will strike you as soon as you read this book:
1. Innovation is the new mantra; whether you're involved in a
not-for-profit, for-profit, service sector, or governmental
organization. 2. Understanding that innovation and creative
activities penetrate into every part of an organization requiring
multiple perspectives that drive a new way of thinking and working
that impacts the organization's culture, social operations, and
commercial context that impacts the total organization, and not
just new products or services. 3. Innovation is an exciting
adventure. Total Innovative Management Excellence (TIME): The
Future of Innovation (978-0-367-43242-3, 340635) draws on insights
from around the globe in order to be competitive in fast-moving
technologies.
For visionary leaders, an Organizational Master Plan and associated
technologies have become essential components of strategic decision
making. Written for leaders, planners, consultants, and change
agents, The Organizational Master Plan Handbook: A Catalyst for
Performance Planning and Results explains how to merge the four
planning activities that compose the Organizational Master Plan to
manage, improve, and maximize organizational efficiency and
effectiveness. Written by recognized leaders in applying
Performance Improvement methodologies to business processes and
entire organizations, this book defines the makeup and highlights
the differences in the operating plan, strategic business plan,
strategic improvement plan, and the organization's business plan.
It defines each and explains how to link them to reduce costs and
cycle times. Describing how to use controllable factors as the
foundation for constructing your Organizational Master Plan, it
demonstrates how the plan fits into organizational alignment
activities. Examines all the plans that should go on within an
organization and details the purpose of each Unveils a novel
approach for preparing a Strategic Improvement Plan Lays out a
well-defined roadmap of the Organizational Master Plan process
Explaining how to make the strategic planning process a part of
performance plans for individuals within your organization, the
text incorporates sufficient flexibility so you can adapt and
revise the plans discussed according to changing business needs and
marketplace opportunities. It explains how to develop a set of
vision statements to define how your organization will function
five years in the future as well as how to develop the strategies
needed to make the required transformation a success. Praise for
the Book: Harrington and Voehl present the most comprehensive and
effective approach to optimizing an organization's performance
developed to date. -Tang Xiaofen, President of the Shanghai
Association for Quality & President of the Shanghai Academy of
Quality Management Compulsory reading for all leaders to maximize
efficiency and effectiveness while navigating business in this
risky global economy.-Acn. Shan Ruprai President APQO, National
Chairman Australian Organisation for Quality, and Chairman AIBI
Australia A Note from the Authors: Organizational Master Plans are
tangible and often visible statements of where the organization is
now, what it should be in the future and what is required to get
there. While processes for developing them vary, master plans are
most successful when they represent a vision that brings together
the concerns of different interest groups, and their
recommendations create a ground swell of business community and
political support. Good Organizational Master Plans are flexible,
and have involved the business leaders and other stakeholders from
the outset, giving the plan a legitimate base, and a better chance
to come to fruition. While circumstances vary from place to place,
the decision to develop a master plan is often determined by the
need to understand the current conditions of the marketplace, to
generate and build stakeholder interest and participation, to
create a new and common vision for the future, and/or to develop a
clear and solid set of recommendations and implementation strategy.
Susan Rademacher, executive director of the Louisville Olmsted
Parks Conservancy, had this to say about the process of developing
Louisville's Organizational Master Plan: . . .When we got started
with our master plan, there were a few important things that we
focused on. One was that we started with a belief in the native
intelligence of this community, from 1888 forward. And we invited
the public to really dream about what these parks could be, what
they remembered the parks as, and we tried to change expectations
in that way. Typically in the past, ...the little changes that come
about in parks are politically motivated to get a big bang in the
short term for the next election. And ... our parks were suffering
from that. So when we invited the community to dream large, we
changed the expectations and also changed the expectations of what
the public sector was looking to do.
This book focuses on the creative tools and techniques, decisions,
activities, and practices that move ideas to realization generate
business value. It has a unique leaning on learning and mastering
the improvement tools for managing the investment in creating new
opportunities for generating customer value. It includes the
discipline of managing the creative tools, methods and processes
involved in innovation. It can be used to develop both product and
organizational innovation. This Handbook includes a set of tools
that allow managers and engineers to cooperate with a common
understanding of goals and processes.
Although Lean and Six Sigma appear to be quite different, when
used together they have shown to deliver unprecedented improvements
to quality and profitability. The Lean Six Sigma Black Belt
Handbook: Tools and Methods for Process Acceleration explains how
to integrate these seemingly dissimilar approaches to increase
production speed while decreasing variations and costs in your
organization.
Presenting problem-solving tools you can use to immediately
determine the sources of the problems in your organization, the
book is based on a recent survey that analyzed Six Sigma tools to
determine which are the most beneficial. Although it focuses on the
most commonly used tools, it also includes coverage of those used a
minimum of two times on every five Six Sigma projects.
Filled with diagrams of the tools you ll need, the book supplies a
comprehensive framework to help you for organize and process the
vast amount of information currently available about Lean, quality
management, and continuous improvement process applications. It
begins with an overview of Six Sigma, followed by little-known tips
for using Lean Six Sigma (LSS) effectively. It examines the LSS
quality system, its supporting organization, and the different
roles involved.
Identifying the theories required to support a contemporary Lean
system, the book describes the new skills and technologies that you
need to master to be certified at the Lean Six Sigma Black Belt
(LSSBB) level. It also covers the advanced non-statistical and
statistical tools that are new to the LSSBB body of
knowledge.
Presenting time-tested insights of a distinguished group of
authors, the book provides the understanding required to select the
solutions that best fit your organization's aim and culture. It
also includes exercises, worksheets, and templates you can easily
customize to create your own handbook for continuous process
improvement.
Designed to make the methodologies you choose easy to follow, the
book will help Black Belts and Senseis better engage their
employees, as well as provide an integrated and visual process
management structure for reporting and sustaining continuous
improvement breakthroughs and initiatives.
"
Performance management, the primary focus of a Lean
organization, occurs through continuous improvement programs that
focus on education, belief systems development, and effective
change management. Presenting a first-of-its-kind approach, The
Lean Management Systems Handbook details the critical components
required for sustainable Lean management.
Positioning Lean as a management operational philosophy far beyond
the traditional set of improvement tools, the book explains how
managers at all levels of the organization can integrate Lean into
their daily management activities. It defines the Lean philosophy
as well as the beliefs and behaviors required to develop a thriving
Lean company culture.
The book captures the essence of Lean learning and Lean doing and
illustrates practical applications of Lean management. It begins by
covering the basics that encompass Lean management and leadership
in two critical areas: maintenance/control and improvement.
After reading this book, you will better understand how to see
waste, measure waste, eliminate waste, and develop an active change
improvement workplace. You will also gain the practical
understanding required to determine which Lean tool is best suited
to your particular need for supporting an organization-wide
management system.
Expounding on essential Lean concepts, this is an ideal guide to
help new managers and leaders make the transition from theory to
successful application in the field. Complete with brief summaries
and examples of the most important tools in Lean management systems
development in each chapter, the book provides a reliable roadmap
for deploying a Lean management system across your organization,
and subsequently across your entire value stream.
The best time to stop projects or programs that will not be
successful is before they are ever started. Research has shown that
the focused use of realistic business case analysis on proposed
initiatives could enable your organization to reduce the amount of
project waste and churn (rework) by up to 40 percent, potentially
avoiding millions of dollars lost on projects, programs, and
initiatives that would fail to produce the desired results. This
book illustrates how to develop a strong business case which links
investments to program results and, ultimately, with the strategic
outcomes of the organization. In addition, the book provides a
template and example case studies for those seeking to fast-track
the development of a business case within their organization.
Making the Case for Change: Using Effective Business Cases to
Minimize Project and Innovation Failures provides executive teams
and change agents with the information required to make better
business case decisions. This book can be used throughout the life
cycle of the project to assist with gaining a better understanding
of the following key knowledge areas for developing a business
case: Understanding the present problem/improvement opportunity
Documenting how the project, program, or initiative will add value
to the organization Validating the data and the assumptions that
the projected improvements are based upon Calculating the level of
confidence that can be placed upon the conclusions that are reached
Assessing the alternative solutions that were considered Weighing
the costs vs. the benefits of the proposed initiative Analyzing and
mitigating the risks to completing 100 percent of the project's
goals Eliciting and prioritizing the requirements of key
stakeholders and subject matter experts Identifying the key people
that are involved in the proposed project and the skills needed to
implement the proposed change Obtaining consensus on the decision
to move forward, as well as on the methods used and the conclusions
specified in the analysis Ideal for executives and
project/initiative managers seeking approval of an activity,
initiative, program, or project, the book presents proven tips,
advice, suggestions, and recommended courses of action for
developing effective business cases. In addition, suggestions for
recruiting a responsible senior officer or sponsor for the project
and for engaging an audience are provided. The authors combine
their own experience in business case development with approaches
used by world-class organizations. They provide a general range of
assessment criteria that can be applied to almost any type of
project business cases. The text discusses each of the 8 activities
and the 35 tasks that make up the business case development
process. This process supplies you with a proven approach for
creating comprehensive and well-constructed business case
evaluations that will either ensure the success of your project, or
eliminate unsuccessful projects, programs, and initiatives before
they start.
Change Management: Manage Change or It Will Manage You represents a
substantial core guidance effort for Change Management
practitioners. Organizations currently contend with increasingly
higher levels of knowledge-driven competition. Many attempt to meet
the challenge by investing in expensive knowledge-driven change
management systems. Such systems are useless, and sometimes even
harmful, for making strategic decisions because they do not
distinguish between what is strategically relevant and what is not.
This Management-for-Results Handbook focuses on identifying and
managing the specific, critical knowledge assets that your
organization needs to disrupt your competitors, including tacit
experience of key employees, a deep understanding of customers'
needs, valuable patents and copyrights, shared industry practices,
and customer- and supplier-generated innovations. The authors
present two aspects of Change Management: (1) traditional Change
Management as it impacts the project management team's activities
and (2) a suggested new approach to Change Management directed at
changing the culture. The focus is to prepare the people impacted
by the project and change activities to accept and adapt to the
new/changed working conditions. The first half of the book deals
with traditional Change Management, which covers the topics of
remembering, understanding, and applying. The second half presents
the authors' new approach to changing the culture, which deals with
analyzing, evaluating, and creating.
In today's fast-moving, high-technology environment, the focus on
quality has given way to a focus on innovation. From presidents of
the United States to presidents of Fortune 500 companies, it is
clear that everyone thinks innovation is extremely important. The
challenge is that few people stop to define why innovation is
important-to understand what's driving the need for more
innovation. We all agree that more frequent innovation is
important, even necessary. What remains unanswered is why we allow
innovation consultants, elected officials, and business leaders to
tell us innovation is important, but not demonstrate the underlying
reasons why. The three volumes of The Innovation Tools Handbook
cover 76 top-rated tools and methods, from the hundreds available,
that every innovator must master to be successful. Volume I covers
24 creative tools/methodologies most frequently used to change an
organization's structure and operations. It provides a clear
understanding of how all 24 tools are used and the type or results
they can generate, so you can learn to select the right combination
of tools that best meet your organization's needs. This book is the
result of a research study that defined the most efficient,
effective, and frequently used tools in the innovative process. For
each tool described, it provides a definition, identifies the user
of the tool or methodology, explains what phases of the innovation
process the tool is used, describes how the tool is used, supplies
examples of the outputs from the tool, identifies software that can
help you maximize the effectiveness of the tool, and includes
references and suggestions for further reading. Tools and
methodologies covered include: Agile innovation, benchmarking,
business case development, business plans, comparative analysis,
competitive analysis, contingency planning, costs analysis,
financial reporting, focus groups, identifying and engaging
stakeholders, innovation master plan, knowledge management systems,
market research and surveys, organizational change management,
potential investor presentation, project management, S-curve model,
safeguarding intellectual properties, systems thinking, value
propositioning, and visioning.
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