Remove 2013 Remove Airlines Remove Innovation Remove Technology
article thumbnail

0511 | Larry Downes: Full Transcript

LDRLB

The most recent being Big Bang Disruption: Strategy in the Age of Devastating Innovation. Paul Nunes and I have known each other for many years, and we’ve both been writing about the subject of disruptive innovation from different vantage points and different angles. DAVID: Yeah. You call it this big bang disruption.

article thumbnail

To Cut Health Costs, Focus on the First Minutes of Care

Harvard Business Review

Consider the harrowing events after the crash-landing of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 last July 6th 2013. Second, embrace technology. Medical technology is often perceived as a driver of health care costs, and there is certainly some truth to that. Cutting costs Health Innovation' In medicine, timing is everything.

Cost 8
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How to Turn Around Nearly Anything

Harvard Business Review

The Boston Red Sox 2013 World Series championship will long be remembered as proof that you can turn around nearly anything. Others need a course correction while still profitable (Microsoft), or a momentum shift because of disruptive new technologies (newspaper companies). For airlines, it is on-time performance.

How To 9
article thumbnail

The Tech Trends You Can’t Ignore in 2015

Harvard Business Review

At the end of each year, I apply a framework to surface the most important emerging trends in digital media and emerging technology for the year ahead. Where/how are people having difficulty with technology? Smart virtual personal assistants: SVPAs started entering the market in 2013. Where/how are people stuck?

Trends 8
article thumbnail

The Benefits of Hiring Your Best Customers

Harvard Business Review

The airline industry has experienced great volatility from deregulation, takeovers through mergers and acquisitions, and, as always, unpredictable forces of nature. ” Krolick also noted that a meaningful number of United Airlines employees are also pilots—these are super-superconsumers. Unlocking Energy. Building Empathy.

article thumbnail

Understanding the New Battle Over Net Neutrality

Harvard Business Review

These information services, the thinking went, were better left free to innovate and compete largely exempt from FCC regulation. There is widespread agreement among economists that the current open, modular nature of the Internet has stimulated innovation and growth. An open Internet does seem like a good thing.