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Open Talent - Leveraging the Global Workforce to Solve Your Biggest Challenges: John Winsor, Jin H. Paik Open Talent - Leveraging the Global Workforce to Solve Your Biggest Challenges
John Winsor, Jin H. Paik
R619 Discovery Miles 6 190 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In the new world of work, one thing is clear: the war for talent is over—and talent won. As the pandemic waned, we returned to sparsely populated offices and empty conference rooms. Our working life had been transformed, seemingly overnight. But the truth is that the ever-growing digital wave has long been breaking down organizational boundaries and increasing open innovation, including the use of crowdsourcing platforms as a talent solution. Now the imperative is clear: adapt to and leverage this new, digitally enabled world of "open talent"—or get left behind. In this eye-opening, essential guidebook for the new world of work, John Winsor and Jin Paik, leaders at the Laboratory for Innovation Science at Harvard, show how the massive reset of the pandemic allowed talented workers everywhere to exit their jobs without leaving the workforce. Now some are freelancing for multiple companies or starting small businesses, leaving hiring managers scratching their heads over a workforce gone AWOL. What's more, talent has more power than ever using platforms such as Freelancer.com, Fiverr, and Upwork, setting their own terms for work: what, where, when, and at what price. How can companies adapt? The key, the authors argue, is shifting to a more "distributed" idea of the organization that revolves around talent (people) and projects, not divisions and offices. In this new model, which the authors call a networked organization, talent is culled from both inside and outside the organization, dispensing with siloed approaches to talent acquisition and instead viewing talent through a single lens: as a global ecosystem that can be tapped as needed. With rich stories, keen insights, and an abundance of practical advice, Winsor and Paik provide a new framework and operating model for transforming your organization into a talent-orchestrating, problem-solving machine.

What Your Preacher Didn't Tell You - That You Really Ought to Know (Hardcover): John Winsor What Your Preacher Didn't Tell You - That You Really Ought to Know (Hardcover)
John Winsor
R647 R544 Discovery Miles 5 440 Save R103 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

What your preacher didn t tell you is this: Christianity was a Medieval invention that contradicts what Jesus taught. He didn t believe that he was divine or that anybody was bound for heaven. Winsor quotes the Bible itself to explain how preachers obfuscate its meaning.

Followers are deceived by tricks such as the conflation of terms that are not synonymous. Son of Man referred to mankind in general, not to Jesus. Kingdom of Heaven referred to a future earthly kingdom that Jesus hoped to rule, not to Heaven itself. His own prayer asks "Yahweh" to establish it and make life "on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10). Jesus thought it would come very soon: you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the son of man comes (Matthew 10:23). He expected "Yahweh" to bring people to the kingdom in clouds with great power and glory (Mark 13:26).

Fundamentalists falsely assert that there is no wall of separation between Church and State. They create "de facto" religious tests and poison our public discourse. Christian dogma conflicts with historical and scientific facts and even with Biblical text. Its interference in politics undermines our ability to seek real-world solutions to real-world problems. Preachers often claim that the Bible s text is too complicated for lay people to understand, but if you re armed with the clues in this book, it is fairly straightforward reading. If you have questions about the Bible, Christianity, and how they relate to modern science and American democracy, you ll find real answers here.

Baked In - Creating Products and Businesses That Market Themselves (Paperback): Alex Bogusky, John Winsor Baked In - Creating Products and Businesses That Market Themselves (Paperback)
Alex Bogusky, John Winsor
R377 R269 Discovery Miles 2 690 Save R108 (29%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"A provocative and compelling message, and a vision for the future."

Matt Jacobson, Head of Market Development, Facebook

Brands must build a new relationship with their customers and the culture they participate in. The old rule was: Create safe, ordinary products and combine them with mass marketing. The new rule is: Create truly innovative products and build the marketing right into them. Today, the product is at the center of the conversation. It's within the product itself that a brand has the most leverage with consumers.

So where should companies start? They must take their brands back to their foundations, and realize that the message is not the product, but that the product is the message. Baked In gives companies a step-by-step guide on how to adapt and succeed in this brave new world. Authors Alex Bogusky and John Winsor, of famed ad firm Crispin Porter + Bogusky, have worked with some of the most important brands in today's marketplace, including American Express, Best Buy, Burger King, Coca-Cola, Google, Nike, Microsoft, Patagonia, and Toyota, utilizing the tools they discuss in this book.

Too many companies have overlooked the fact that their products are often the most powerful brand-building tools at their disposal. Advertising agencies and branding experts have seduced them into thinking that marketing was their only real means to connect with consumers. At the same time, many companies have underestimated consumers' ability to recognize innovation. Today, the ability to innovate is not only companies' best marketing tool, but also their best way to grow revenues and profits. Why? Because innovative product design has the ability to create whole new markets. But innovating means taking risks.

Most products are still marketed to reach an old market. Companies that are built using mass-marketing develop their products according to the same principles. They round the edges, smooth out the differentiating features, and try to make products that work for the masses. They use focus groups to make sure products are "acceptable" but acceptable is always the most risky strategy, because "acceptable" products almost always fail in today's marketing environment. At the same time, many of the marketing tools that companies have traditionally relied on, like traditional advertising, are losing their power.

The reason? Customers have changed: They want products that are perfectly tailored to satisfy their needs, and they want to have a say in their creation. Whether companies like it or not, with technology platforms like YouTube, customers will communicate precisely how they love or hate your product, your brand, and your company. If you don't have what they want, they'll either obtain it from a competitor somewhere else in the world or build it themselves.

This means that your customers demand to be involved with your brand. They want to participate in the building of a brand they will be loyal to, in generating a conversation around brands, and in manufacturing products that will speak to their needs. They hack and appropriate brands they love. They research a company's products, brands, and corporate culture; share their buying experiences, rate them, and create positive or negative haloes around brands; and they manipulate broader public perceptions of brands. More than ever, the customer is in control.

For many companies, it's high time to realize that collaboration is at the heart of this new paradigm. While collaboration with customers is key, the ability to collaborate internally is even more important. This collaboration is crucial to establishing brands through creating great, innovative products.

Let's look back. Many of the important brands in American history Gillette and Disney, to name two examples became successful not because of clever marketing, but because they offered something you couldn't get anywhere else. This remains true today: Apple owes much of its brand power to the constant upgrade of such iconic products as the Macintosh and the iPod.

Sometimes great brands emerge without much marketing or advertising support at all. Starbucks is a great example. For a long time its coffee and shops were their sole marketing tools. Other examples include Patagonia, Jones Soda, and Pangea Organics. Similarly, the global clothing retailer Zara has never run an advertising campaign but it does launch 10,000 new designs each year in its more than 1,000 shops worldwide. The company innovated by dramatically reducing the time from inspiration to in-store product, allowing it to stay months ahead of its competitors.

Look at Google: Is Google a media company based on advertising, or a search tool for its users? Google makes 99 percent of its revenue from advertising, without spending anything on billboards, Super Bowl commercials, or TV commercials. The company's tremendous organic growth was due entirely to the fame of its remarkable products spreading across the nation by word of mouth.

Craigslist follows the same credo. In the words of its founder and CEO Jim Buckmaster, "We pay zero attention to brand. We never use the word internally. We do zero advertising. We don't have a logo. We've never done a focus group. We don't care about any of that. And now we're told we have the strongest brand ever for a company our size. That's pretty ironic."

Baked In shows how marketing can and must re-invent itself in the 21st century, using the tools at hand both from digital technology and networked media and from the fast-evolving activist marketplace. As such, it's an essential guide for all businesses looking to succeed."

What Your Preacher Didn't Tell You - That You Really Ought to Know (Paperback): John Winsor What Your Preacher Didn't Tell You - That You Really Ought to Know (Paperback)
John Winsor
R399 R336 Discovery Miles 3 360 Save R63 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

What your preacher didn t tell you is this: Christianity was a Medieval invention that contradicts what Jesus taught. He didn t believe that he was divine or that anybody was bound for heaven. Winsor quotes the Bible itself to explain how preachers obfuscate its meaning.

Followers are deceived by tricks such as the conflation of terms that are not synonymous. Son of Man referred to mankind in general, not to Jesus. Kingdom of Heaven referred to a future earthly kingdom that Jesus hoped to rule, not to Heaven itself. His own prayer asks "Yahweh" to establish it and make life "on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10). Jesus thought it would come very soon: you will not have gone through all the towns of Israel before the son of man comes (Matthew 10:23). He expected "Yahweh" to bring people to the kingdom in clouds with great power and glory (Mark 13:26).

Fundamentalists falsely assert that there is no wall of separation between Church and State. They create "de facto" religious tests and poison our public discourse. Christian dogma conflicts with historical and scientific facts and even with Biblical text. Its interference in politics undermines our ability to seek real-world solutions to real-world problems. Preachers often claim that the Bible s text is too complicated for lay people to understand, but if you re armed with the clues in this book, it is fairly straightforward reading. If you have questions about the Bible, Christianity, and how they relate to modern science and American democracy, you ll find real answers here.

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