|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
With the rise of the knowledge economy, the knowledge content of
goods and services is going up just as their material content is
declining. Economic value is increasingly seen to reside in the
former - that is, in intangible assets - rather than in the latter.
Yet we keep wanting to turn knowledge back into something tangible,
something with definite boundaries which can be measured,
manipulated, appropriated, and traded. In short, we want to reify
knowledge.
Scholars have been debating the nature of knowledge since the time
of Plato. Many new insights have been gained from these debates,
but little theoretical consensus has been achieved. Through six
thematically linked chapters, the book articulates the theoretical
approach to the production and distribution of knowledge that
underpins Max Boisot's conceptual framework, the Information Space
or I-Space. In this way the book looks to provide theoretical and
practical underpinnings to Boisot's book Knowledge Assets(OUP,
1998).
Following an introductory chapter, how knowledge relates to data
and information is first examined in chapter 1, and how different
economic actors - entrepreneurs, managers, etc - use knowledge as a
basis for action is explored in chapter 2. Chapter 3 looks at how
the heterogeneity of economic actors arises naturally from their
respective data processing strategies in spite of any similarities
in the data that they might share. Chapter 4 argues, contra much
transaction-based economics, that an organizational order must have
preceded a market order, something that should be reflected in any
knowledge-based theory of the firm. Chapter 5 discusses the
cultural and institutional significance of differentkinds of
knowledge flows. Finally, chapter 6 presents an agent-based
simulation model, SimISpace, that illustrates how the I-Space might
be applied to concrete problems such those of intellectual property
rights. A concluding chapter proposes a research agenda based on
the theorizing developed in the book.
The approach the book sets out is used by a whole range of
organizations to issues of knowledge management, policy, economics,
and organizational and cultural change.
You've been charged with growing your business. Incremental growth
can no longer deliver the results you need. You need truly dynamic
growth - and you need to achieve it without risking a hugely
expensive gamble. How can you encourage innovative new ventures and
pursue ambitious growth while minimizing risk?
In Discovery-Driven Growth, authors McGrath and MacMillan show how
companies can plan and pursue an aggressive growth agenda with
confidence. By carefully framing their strategic growth
opportunities, testing each project assumption against a series of
checkpoints, and creating a culture that acts on evidence and
learning instead of blind stumbling, companies can better control
their costs, minimize surprises, and know when to disengage from
questionable projects--before it's too late.
Providing tools that will help you select and better assess the
potential of any strategic venture, from new product lines to
entirely new businesses, the authors outline a comprehensive
process that lets you identify, manage, and leverage your company's
full portfolio of opportunities. By reducing up-front costs and
eliminating unnecessary risks, you'll be able to avoid missteps and
explore more options to create the breakthrough growth that your
business requires.
Available for the First Time: The Complete Social Entrepreneur's
Playbook Covers all three phases of the start-up to scale-up
process, developed with reader feedback from "one of the more
unusual ebook...experiments of the year" (ThinReads) Wharton
professor Ian C. MacMillan and Dr. James Thompson, director of the
Wharton Social Entrepreneurship Program, provide a tough-love
approach that significantly increases the likelihood of a
successful social enterprise launch in the face of the
high-uncertainty conditions typically encountered by social
entrepreneurs. MacMillan and Thompson used their own systematic
framework to publish The Social Entrepreneur's Playbook. To test
the market, they offered the first phase in their start-up method
(step 1) as a free ebook. Readers were invited to join The Social
Entrepreneur's Advisory Group, and nearly 300 aspiring and active
social entrepreneurs shared feedback that helped shape the complete
edition of the book, which covers all three steps in the start-up
to scale-up process. Based on this crowd-sourced feedback from
readers of the free ebook and drawing on the authors' more than 26
years' combined experience developing and studying social
enterprises in the field across Africa and in the United States,
this new edition provides guidance for each phase: Phase One:
Pressure Test Your Start-Up Idea. Based on the free ebook, this
expanded section now includes advice on setting revenue and social
impact goals, how to navigate the sociopolitical landscape, and how
to develop a strong concept statement. In addition, MacMillan and
Thompson provide advice on how to identify and test a proposed
revenue-generating solution and define and segment your target
population. Phase Two: Plan Your Social Enterprise. All new to this
edition, this critical phase shows you how to frame and scope the
venture, determine what it will take to actually deliver a
sustainable enterprise, identify the key assumptions that have been
made, and design checkpoints to test those assumptions before
making major investments. Phase Three: Launch and Scale Your Social
Enterprise. Available for the first time in this edition, you will
learn how to effectively launch your enterprise, manage upside
potential and downside risk, and strategically scale up. Filled
with accessible frameworks and tools, as well as inspiring stories
of social entrepreneurs, The Social Entrepreneur's Playbook is a
must-read for any aspiring or active social entrepreneur, as well
as philanthropists, foundations, and nonprofits interested in doing
more good with fewer resources. Includes access to downloadable
planning documents, including user-friendly spreadsheets
Available for the First Time: The Complete "Social Entrepreneur's
Playbook"
Covers all three phases of the start-up to scale-up process,
developed with reader feedback from "one of the more unusual
ebook...experiments of the year" ("ThinReads")
Wharton professor Ian C. MacMillan and Dr. James Thompson, director
of the Wharton Social Entrepreneurship Program, provide a
tough-love approach that significantly increases the likelihood of
a successful social enterprise launch in the face of the
high-uncertainty conditions typically encountered by social
entrepreneurs.
MacMillan and Thompson used their own systematic framework to
publish "The Social Entrepreneur's Playbook." To test the market,
they offered the first phase in their start-up method (step 1) as a
free ebook. Readers were invited to join The Social Entrepreneur's
Advisory Group, and nearly 300 aspiring and active social
entrepreneurs shared feedback that helped shape the complete
edition of the book, which covers all three steps in the start-up
to scale-up process.
Based on this crowd-sourced feedback from readers of the free ebook
and drawing on the authors' more than 26 years' combined experience
developing and studying social enterprises in the field across
Africa and in the United States, this new edition provides guidance
for each phase:
Phase One: Pressure Test Your Start-Up Idea. Based on the free
ebook, this expanded section now includes advice on setting revenue
and social impact goals, how to navigate the sociopolitical
landscape, and how to develop a strong concept statement. In
addition, MacMillan and Thompson provide advice on how to identify
and test a proposed revenue-generating solution and define and
segment your target population.
Phase Two: Plan Your Social Enterprise. All new to this edition,
this critical phase shows you how to frame and scope the venture,
determine what it will take to actually deliver a sustainable
enterprise, identify the key assumptions that have been made, and
design checkpoints to test those assumptions before making major
investments.
Phase Three: Launch and Scale Your Social Enterprise. Available for
the first time in this edition, you will learn how to effectively
launch your enterprise, manage upside potential and downside risk,
and strategically scale up.
Filled with accessible frameworks and tools, as well as inspiring
stories of social entrepreneurs, "The Social Entrepreneur's
Playbook" is a must-read for any aspiring or active social
entrepreneur, as well as philanthropists, foundations, and
nonprofits interested in doing more good with fewer resources.
"Includes access to downloadable planning documents, including
user-friendly spreadsheets"
Block, retired from the Stern School of Business at New York
University, and MacMillan (director, Saul C. Snider Entrepreneurial
Center, Wharton) present management practices that have proven
effective for creating new businesses and fostering innovation
within existing businesses. They offer insights on managing
ventures from both the corporate an
|
|