Remove Cost of Capital Remove Development Remove Long-term Remove Operations
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4 Ways Leaders Can Get More from Their Company’s Innovation Efforts

Harvard Business Review

Even if executives try to prioritize it, innovation often gets crowded out by more “urgent” short-term pressures. Another pervasive reason is that senior executives are trained as operators, not innovators. And there’s a fundamental conflict between innovation and optimizing an existing operation.

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How CMOs Can Get CFOs on Their Side

Harvard Business Review

Just 36 percent of CMOs, for example, have quantitatively proven the short-term impact of marketing spend, according to the 2013 CMO Survey (and for demonstrating long-term impact, that figure drops to 32 percent). To date, however, the reality of marketing analytics has fallen short of the promise. Why is this so challenging?

CFO 8
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Finally, Proof That Managing for the Long Term Pays Off

Harvard Business Review

Companies deliver superior results when executives manage for long-term value creation and resist pressure from analysts and investors to focus excessively on meeting Wall Street’s quarterly earnings expectations. This has long seemed intuitively true to us. and historic lows in new capital investment.

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How Banks Can Compete Against an Army of Fintech Startups

Harvard Business Review

Banks’ cost of capital is typically 50 basis points or less. These low-cost and reliable sources of funds are from taxpayer-insured deposits and the Federal Reserve’s discount window. This amounts to putting a toe in the water, while keeping current operations relatively separate and pristine.

Banking 11
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The Comprehensive Business Case for Sustainability

Harvard Business Review

This can disrupt a firm’s ability to operate on schedule and budget. Of the respondents, 72% said that climate change presents risks that could significantly impact their operations, revenue, or expenditures. ” Improving risk management.

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Why Europe's Carbon Woes Matter to the Whole World

Harvard Business Review

Here''s a very strange thing: Europe''s decades-long effort to reduce carbon emissions has been thrown into a shambles because utilities and manufacturers are exceeding their carbon-reduction targets. Markets fundamentally don''t work when they are "long" — that is, flooded with things no one wants. That''s right. Exceeding them.

Price 8
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The Real Reasons Companies Are So Focused on the Short Term

Harvard Business Review

Some argue that profits are stagnant because of short-termism—that decades of focusing on current profits over long-run innovativeness has resulted, now, in companies that are hollowed out. Thus the further out the fruits of R&D, the less likely operating divisions are to conduct it. What’s behind the disconnect?