What's the big idea?
Well, these days, it's the most important resource you can deploy. Quite simply, the more
you know; the faster you go. So whose ideas are you listening to?
Business Minds brings you the
latest and greatest management ideas live and direct from the leading thinkers. The
management gurus, unplugged.
Warren Bennis, James Champy, James Collins, Peter Drucker, Leif Edvinsson, Sumantra
Ghoshal, Daniel Goleman, Gary Hamel, Charles Handy, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Chan Kim, Philip
Kotler, John Kotter, Henry Mintzberg, Nicholas Negroponte, Jonas Ridderstrale, Kenichi
Ohmae, Tom Peters, CK Prahalad, Al Ries, Peter Senge, Patricia Seybold, Don Tapscott,
Lester Thurow, Alvin Toffler, Fons Trompenaars and more
A steady flow of new ideas is
redefining what managers should be doing and how they should be doing it. In a
world where today's theory is often tomorrow's task, the business leaders of tomorrow are
the ones who today think about the next big ideas.
So we believe that ideas
count. The change our organisations and the way they compete; change the goods and
services we produce, and can change forever the way we work. The way we see it, our job is
to bring you the latest thinking, direct from 40 of the best business minds.
Business Minds is your chance
to hear what the brightest and best have to say about the world of management, and a
unique opportunity to engage in an ongoing conversation with a world of ideas. A chance to
reflect on the new ideas, a chance to explore what's on your business mind and a chance to
arm yourself with a monthly dose of the latest thought leadership to keep your own
thinking sharp.
Business Minds brings you the
latest ideas, direct from the brightest minds, delivered in their own words. We think
they're worth listening to.
We have tried to bring
together the gurus of the old world - Peter Drucker, Tom Peters, Peter Senge et al.
"with the gurus of the new world" the likes of Jonas Ridderstrale, Don Tapscott,
and Patty Seybold. The best business minds, however, cannot easily be pigeon-holed. Old
and new economy labels are ultimately unhelpful. The global economy, by its very nature,
is created anew each and every day. The ideas economy, too, is a vibrant marketplace that
is always open for business. The thinkers in this book stand or fall on the applicability
of their ideas. Yet often those ideas are poorly understood by practicing managers.