Business narrative is a set of techniques based on the collection and interpretation of stories collected from a workplace. This technique is most effective when applied to seemingly intractable problems such as culture change, trust, innovation, leadersh
Inquiry and learning into social networks, organizational network analysis, and the relationships among people and systems in complex organizations and networks.
The following is a list of the top 50 pharmaceutical and biotech companies ranked by healthcare revenue. Some companies (eg, Bayer) have additional chemicals revenue not included here. The phrase Big Pharma is often used to refer to companies with revenue
It’s now only a few days until 2007, and a good time for the yearly prediction posts to start rolling out - including one from Mashable. To add a more interesting spin, we’ll throw in a mini-game of blog tag - a few people “tagged” at the end of t
Business management, government management, and military defense management...This illustration charts uses of the predicted "semantic web" by enterprise and government.
Downloadable articles and audio files from the 2006 Semantic Technology Conference held in San Jose, CA. Material is geared toward enterprise and business use of semantic web technologies, although not limited to that topic.
If I were trying to invent a mythic brand, I'd want to be sure that there was a story, not just a product or a pile of facts. That story would promise (and deliver) an heroic outcome. And there needs to be growth and mystery...
Top 10 Trends in Innovation Key Factors Most Affecting Innovation in the US by Thomas Frey, Executive Director of the DaVinci Institute September 16, 2004 Innovation is a broad area of the US economy that means vastly different things to differen
Hamburger Management is a shoddy, debased version of real leadership that focuses on just three things: whatever demands least, can be used fastest, and costs least. It thrives wherever organizations seek to meet unrealistic targets with insufficient reso
"Use The Network To Find An Expert Or Locate Implicit Knowledge Only a fraction of an organization’s "knowledge" exists in databases. Another fraction exists in the form of explicit documents and reports that may be found on an organizational intranet