Amazon.co.uk
What do the Atlanta Braves, Microsoft, 3M, Nike and Intel all have in common? According
to Shona Brown and Kathleen Eisenhardt, authors of Competing on the Edge:
Strategy as Structured Chaos, each of these organisations are predictably unpredictable.
They're leaders not because of their ability to predict the course of their
markets but because they have learned to embrace the notion of change. They're
successful because they've learned to find that edge between structure and
chaos that allows them to be innovative and creative, while maintaining just
enough discipline to focus on executing a plan.
The authors contend that
competing on the edge is not an efficient or predictable way to do business. Instead,
it's learning how to adapt and lead in a business environment that's in a
constant state of flux. "The underlying insight behind competing on the
edge is that strategy is the result of a firm's organising to change constantly
and letting a semi-coherent strategic direction emerge from that organisation. In
other words, it is about combining the two parts of strategy by simultaneously
addressing where you want to go and how you are going to get there."
Brown and Eisenhardt offer
dozens of examples of companies that are successfully and not-so-successfully
finding that balance between anarchy and order. If, on the one hand, you feel
like your company is bogged down by rules and bureaucracy, or if it seems like
no one in your company knows exactly what they're doing, you'll find that Competing
on the Edge is a valuable handbook for change. The book is clearly written,
full of insight and belongs on every manager's bookshelf. It is also highly
recommended. --Harry C Edwards
Amazon.com
What do the Atlanta Braves, Microsoft, 3M, Nike, and Intel all have in common? According
to Shona Brown and Kathleen Eisenhardt, authors of Competing on the Edge:
Strategy as Structured Chaos, each of these organizations are predictably
unpredictable. They're leaders not because of their ability to predict the
course of their markets; rather, these companies have learned to embrace the
notion of change. They're successful because they've learned to find that edge
between structure and chaos that... Lesen
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