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Outsmart!: How To Do What Your Competitors Can't (Hardcover)
by Jim Champy
Market price: ¥ 220.00
MSL price:
¥ 198.00
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Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
Called a Good to Great on innovation, this book is a research-based analysis of innovative businesses. |
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Author: Jim Champy
Publisher: FT Press; 1 edition
Pub. in: March, 2008
ISBN: 0132357771
Pages: 208
Measurements: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA01525
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-0132357777
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- MSL Picks -
"Outsmart" is a series of short studies describing eight fast-growth companies. Readers can hopefully generalize from the thinking involved to create new ideas for themselves.
The first involved a new company called "Sonicbids," where music promoters (about 10,000) can list the events for which they need musicians, and the 120,000 musician-members can look over the list and make their contacts. The total market involved is estimated at $15 billion, with about 90% too small for the standard approach to the business. Yet, there is about $2.5 billion in wedding business/year alone. Musician-members pay an annual fee to Sonicbids, as well as a small per event fee to promoters who guarantee they will review the submitted material.
The second example is about "Minute Clinic" - kiosks staffed by nurse-practitioners to provide easily accessible basic medical care at low costs. Software directs strict protocols and screening procedures to confirm a diagnosis and rule out really serious conditions. Each kiosk also has a physician on-call for any doubts or special concerns. Most patients are treated within 15 minutes; those delayed receive pagers allowing them to shop in the surrounding store. CVS Pharmacy has since bought out the concept - obviously benefiting from the prescriptions written as an outcome of the process.
An interesting set of mini-case-studies involving new thinking in today's world.
(From quoting a guest reviewer)
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Jim Champy is one of the leading management and business thinkers of our time. His first best seller, Reengineering the Corporation, remains the bible for executing process change. His second book, Reengineering Management, another best seller, was recognized by Business Week as one of the most important books of its time. But Champy is also an experienced manager and advisor. He is the Chairman of Consulting for Perot Systems. He speaks and writes with the authority of real business experience and brings pragmatism to the world of business. In this new series of books, Champy looks at what’s working today for high-growth businesses. Champy observes that there is not much new in management, but there is a lot new in business–and a lot to learn from what’s new.
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From publisher
A New York Times Best Seller More than 3 Million Copies Sold Jim Champy revolutionized business with Reengineering the Corporation. Now, in Outsmart! he's doing it again. This concise, fast-paced book shows how you can achieve breakthrough growth by consistently outsmarting your competition. Champy reveals the surprising, counterintuitive lessons learned by companies that have achieved super-high growth for at least three straight years. Drawing on the strategies of some of today-s best -high velocity- companies, he identifies eight powerful ways to compete in even the roughest marketplace. You-ll discover how to find distinctive market positions and sustainable advantages in products, services, delivery methods, and unexpected customers with unexpected needs.
How to reignite growth by-
- Seeing what others don't
- Breaking free of mental legacies
- Using all you know
- Changing your frame of reference
- Tapping others- successes
- Creating order out of chaos
- Simplifying complexity
- Doing everything yourself
there is not much new in management.
but there is a lot new in business.
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Preface In my more than 30 years of work as a consultant and author, I've learned that the best ideas are found inside companies. But it wasn't always so. There was a time when I strayed from the realm of hands-on pragmatism to search the writings of philosophers for ideas that could be applied to business. To be honest, I thought that quoting the ancients made me sound smarter.
One day, while waxing philosophic during a speech in Monterey, Mexico, I encountered a far smarter gentleman of a certain age sitting in the front row. He interrupted me to ask how the philosophy of Mexico's nineteenth-century ruler, Gen. Antonio Santa Anna, could be applied to management. What could a man both admired and reviled contribute to business? The answer, which my interlocutor duly shared with all present, was a gem of pragmatism. Santa Anna, he told us, firmly believed that whatever worked was the right thing to do.
I have taken his lesson to heart, and this book describes the very real and practical strategies that are working for today's most successful businesses, strategies that I believe will sustain their success into the future. Because the primary goal of all good strategy is growth, the companies analyzed in these pages are among the world's fastest-growing enterprises.
But equally important, their revenue-producing ideas are neither hypothetical nor based on esoteric technologies. They don't require hundreds of millions of venture capital dollars or the vast sums from stock offerings to implement. Rather, they are strategies that any business leader can easily and immediately understand.
This is the first in a planned series comprising four compact volumes on the key topics of strategy, marketing, leadership, and operations. Taken together, the books aim to deliver the most current intelligence available on how to succeed in today's brave new world of business. An ambitious objective? Yes. But what I see a host of companies accomplishing today has me both excited and encouraged.
My ability to write about these matters does not derive from scholarly pursuits, although I've braved assorted academic challenges. Necessity drove me to learn by doing. It is a path that I recommend to anyone who seeks a powerful curriculum and an unforgettable teacher.
In my younger years, I assumed that I would join my family's construction business in Lawrence, Massachusetts, a mill city north of Boston. My quest for relevant knowledge sent me to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where I studied engineering, then to Boston College where I studied law. Finally, I returned to Lawrence for my early training in business.
In my family's company, there were no strategies, business plans, or budgets. We did what seemed right-day by day. We hired people, bought equipment-even acquired real estate-that seemed good for the business. Risk taking was a natural act. We had no spreadsheets, and the most advanced form of technology was a mechanical calculator. But the business worked-most of the time.
In Lawrence, I also had my first taste of a multicultural world. We had stone masons from Italy, carpenters from Quebec, and painters from Ireland. I learned a lot from these folks-something about teams, but more about how, when left alone, good people will do the right thing. I carried this and other lessons into my life in business.
Thanks to my MIT roommate, Tom Gerrity, I was later treated to an advanced course in commerce when he invited two MIT friends and me to join him in a business venture. In 1969, we launched Index Systems, an information-technology start-up based on Tom's Ph.D. research into automating management decision making. We each invested $370, the bet of a lifetime. Because our work was on the cutting edge of technology and business change, we serendipitously became an acquisition target for a bigger company nearly two decades later. In 1988, Computer Science Corporation (CSC) bought our firm and turned it into CSC's management-consulting arm. I became CSC Index's CEO and chairman after the Wharton School of Business lured away our hottest property, Tom, to become the school's dean. I was left to expand CSC Index into what became a $240 million company.
Out of those Index years came the ideas—developed with Michael Hammer and other colleagues—that formed my first book, Reengineering the Corporation, which argued that companies need to change radically and be managed from a process perspective. It became the best-selling business book of the 1990s. I followed this with a second book, Reengineering Management, in which I contended that leaders had to change their own ways of thinking before they could change their organizations. And in a third book, X-Engineering the Corporation, I made the case that process change must extend outside company walls to suppliers, customers, and business partners.
My current job as Chairman of Consulting for Perot Systems gives me access to many leaders who live and work on the frontiers of business, where the rules of industry are stretched (and sometimes broken). What I learn from these leaders is what I teach to others, and I write books to crystallize the findings of my latest field research.
My best work, however, has always been done with collaborators. And for this book, and the three that will follow in this series, I must acknowledge and thank the talented editors and researchers at Wordworks, Inc.—Donna Sammons Carpenter, Maurice Coyle, Ruth Hlavacek, Larry Martz, Molly Sammons Morris, Cindy Sammons, Robert Shnayerson, Robert W. Stock, and Ellen Wojahn; and Helen Rees and Joan Mazmanian of the Helen Rees Literary Agency. I would also like to acknowledge my very able assistant, Dee Dee Haggerty. And, as always, I am grateful to my wife, Lois, and my son, Adam, for their support, advice, and tolerance when I write. Lois and Adam keep me grounded.
Nothing pleases me more than sharing what we have discovered with people who might actually use it, especially when the ideas we have uncovered are not only fresh, but simple and practical. Ahead lies a world of creative companies with uncommon strategies and a singular record for making good on them. How do they do it? |
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Ray Stata(MSL quoted), USA
<2008-10-31 00:00>
Champy’s engaging prose, fascinating success stories, penetrating reflections, and provocative challenges to the status quo capture your full attention from the first page to the last and leave your mind swirling with new thoughts about how to exploit opportunities in a very different world. |
Dr. Robert “Bob” Metcalfe(MSL quoted), USA
<2008-10-31 00:00>
To outsmart or be outsmarted, that is the question in modern business. Jim Champy has found the answer, in fact many answers, by looking inside amazingly successful companies. And he tells their simple stories in this book that is so delightfully short it can be read on one flight. |
Denis A. Bovin(MSL quoted), USA
<2008-10-31 00:00>
In this remarkably readable and incisive book, Jim Champy provides case studies of fast growing, innovative companies that have created and implemented successful strategies that are practical, market tested, and reproducible in today’s global marketplace. |
Gururaj “Desh” Deshpande(MSL quoted), USA
<2008-10-31 00:00>
This book shows how to spot opportunities in a world that looks, at times, like everything is done. Jim has strung together nine pearls that reveal the essence of entrepreneurship. |
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