Detecting marketplace “fault lines” is the key to building the case for preemptive change. Read the full Harvard Business Review article.… Read More
Innosight’s seventh senior executive summit drew leaders of companies ranging from Aetna, Boeing, and Procter & Gamble to MetLife, Wal-Mart and Xerox. Held in our Business Design Lab in August 2015, the discussion focused on tackling three critical questions around overcoming the human dynamics that persistently stand in the way of innovation and change at… Read More
Leaders ascend to their positions by mastering today’s (or even yesterday’s) business. Almost by definition, they don’t have first-hand experience with a disruptive shift in their market when they encounter it. A lack of intuition around the new and different can at best slow progress and at worst lead to serious strategic missteps. What should […]… Read More
From time to time, the basis of competition in an industry shifts so dramatically that shifting with it requires a new long-term vision that calls for the organization to do things it never would have done in the past. The hardest part is connecting long-term goals to near-term actions — especially when those new actions […]… Read More
Doug McMillon, the CEO and president of Wal-Mart stores, joined us at our recent CEO Summit. We spoke with him about his strategic vision.… Read More
Last Wednesday we held a Webinar on corporate transformation. It drew on the Harvard Business Review article “Two Routes to Resilience” (in which Gilbert detailed his first-hand experience driving transformation as CEO of Deseret News) and Innosight’s field experience guiding corporate clients around transformation. The Webinar had three main messages: Transformation involves two components, not… Read More
Sooner or later, most companies will need to transform themselves in response to disruptive market shifts. It may not be today or tomorrow — but it will happen. Are you ready? Is your enterprise-ready?… Read More
There’s no harder job for a corporate leader than transformation. One key to success is recognizing that transforming a business involves three activities: Transforming the core business to maximize its resilience (“Transformation A”) Creating a disruptive growth engine (“Transformation B”) Building a mechanism to share capabilities between the two (“Capabilities Exchange”) Those three activities (detailed […]… Read More
For our HBR article, Innosight interviewed CEOs of two severly disrupted companies to discover what works when navigating transformation. Xerox CEO Ursula Burns and B&N CEO William Lynch offer up five strategic lessons.… Read More
Sooner or later, most companies will need to reinvent themselves in response to disruptive market shifts, technologies, or start-ups. But can a new business model quickly replace all the revenue an incumbent has lost to market upheaval? Only in rare instances, say the authors.… Read More