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Groupon Doomed by Too Much of a Good Thing

Harvard Business Review

Clayton Christensen would agree with the intuition that Groupon displays but ignores: businesses should become profitable before they become big. The financial results of Groupon's traditional business continue to deteriorate, especially in mature markets, and new ventures such as Groupon Now also have failed to drive profits.

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Founding a Company Doesn’t Have to be a Big Career Risk

Harvard Business Review

After five years, in 2004, Tickle was profitable with more than $20 million in revenue; it received an acquisition offer for $100 million, as well as IPO entreaties. That was the general consensus after one of my favorite HBS classes: an entrepreneurship case on a company called Tickle. Other risk-mitigation strategies .

Career 9
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In Big Companies, Lean Is Only One Piece of the Puzzle

Harvard Business Review

A good management team will be dedicated to creating product market fit, otherwise the business will flounder. Investors are involved for the long haul, understanding that startup managers will have to experiment and fail along the way to a successful IPO. In a good start-up, these characteristics are not hard to find.

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Disruptive Trends to Watch in 2013

Harvard Business Review

Harvard Professor and Innosight cofounder Clayton Christensen alerted the world to the pattern of disruptive change almost two decades ago. Academics and practitioners have built on Christensen's work to develop robust frameworks that can help leaders to spot disruptive developments early and respond appropriately. Coming of age.

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