Personal Finance
I've been asked why I'm introducing my new book, Outsmart!: How To Do What Your Competitors Can't, during a time of economic challenge. Can companies even think about growth now? Frankly, this is a time when really smart companies can grow. But growing during a recession
requires either finding new opportunities -- markets, products or services -- or poaching your competitors' customers. If you're ambitious, you have no choice but to outsmart the competition.
I wrote my first book, Reengineering the Corporation during a recession. It quickly sold a couple of million copies because companies knew they had to become dramatically more productive in order to compete in tough times. Reengineering was about changing the nature of work, looking at work from a process perspective, not just as a task in a department or business function. Although some managers mistakenly thought reengineering just meant downsizing, those who understood real process change became dramatically more competitive.
There is still a lot of reengineering to do, especially now when the Internet enables companies to operate in new ways. But today, companies need more than just process change -- they must rethink whole business models. That means looking at the global economy and what technology enables as opportunities for change, not as threats. Now is the time to rethink both what you deliver and how you deliver to customers.
So when Pearson PSO, my publisher, asked me to write a series of short business books, I jumped at the chance to find what's really new in business. I looked at more than a thousand companies that had grown at double or triple digit rates over two or more years, and selected those that I believed were operating in some fundamentally new way. I then went deeper to understand the source of those companies' ideas and how the ideas were uniquely implemented.
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