Remove 2012 Remove Film Remove Industry Remove Technology
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Rookie Talent: Avoiding a Kodak Moment

Leading Blog

During most of the 20th century Kodak held a dominant position in photographic film, and in 1976, had an 89% market share of photographic film sales in the United States. In 2012, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. This generation is the first to be raised in a post-industrial era driven by technology.

Film 150
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Fujifilm Succeeded Where Kodak Failed

Coaching Tip

Eastman Kodak was head and shoulders above all the others in the manufacture of photographic film when Fujifilm wasn't in 1963. Kodak's technology was also far ahead of Fujifilm's. just as worldwide film sales almost immediately began to fall. In 2001, the global demand for color film suddenly plunged. What happened?

Film 70
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Patents, Copyrights and Innovation, Oh My!

Coaching Tip

Then once a printed or photographed product was copyrighted, people, companies and industries began to protect their printed or photographed intellectual property via copyright protection in a court of law. . Source: Roger Parloff , senior editor, FORTUNE, July 23, 2012. These works are what economists call public goods.

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What Cross-Functional Teams Might Need to Really Succeed

The Office Blend Blog

Here are a few elements I would like to consider, likely critical to the support of cross-functional teams; 1) role clarity, 2) built sense of community, 3) networks, and 4) technology/systems that inform the network. Technology that Informs the Network. Dr. Marla Gottschalk is an Industrial/Organizational Psychologist.

Team 40
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Kodak’s Downfall Wasn’t About Technology

Harvard Business Review

Given that Kodak’s core business was selling film, it is not hard to see why the last few decades proved challenging. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012, exited legacy businesses and sold off its patents before re-emerging as a sharply smaller company in 2013. Consider Fuji Photo Film. Why did this happen?

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What 40 Years of Research Reveals About the Difference Between Disruptive and Radical Innovation

Harvard Business Review

“If you went to bed last night as an industrial company, you’re going to wake up this morning as a software and analytics company.” The first thing they should know is that not all technological change is “disruptive.” It appealed to a niche of film nerds. Bloomberg/Getty Images.

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James Bond, Dunder Mifflin, and the Future of Product Placement

Harvard Business Review

An obvious solution is product placement, a company paying for its product to be featured prominently in a film or television program as a form of advertising. Product placement can also lower audiences’ evaluations of the focal entertainment product (the film or the show), as recently demonstrated by Andre Marchand and colleagues.

Bond 8