Remove Crisis Remove Hypercompetition Remove Innovation Remove Technology
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Even for Companies, the U.S. Is Split Between Haves and Have-Nots

Harvard Business Review

Deloitte attributes this fall in part to rising competitive intensity, as a result of new technologies and lower entry barriers. So although you might expect that in a hypercompetitive environment, ambitious companies would constantly wrest market share from the leading firms, the reality is quite the opposite.

ROIC 8
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Why WikiLeaks Matters More (And Less) than You Think

Harvard Business Review

And unfortunately, it's also one of the most in need of radical institutional innovation. And the systemic result of that is crisis, stagnation, and decline. But prosperity is always going to accrue to those who innovate yesterday's rusting, creaking institutions. But to the newcomers, let me explain what I mean.

GDP 15
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We All Work at Enron Now

Harvard Business Review

Incentives shape human behavior — and overcounting benefits and undercounting costs is a surefire way to blunt our incentives to innovate, to take on ambitious goals, and create real value. Innovation atrophy. Corporations would fail at innovating, creating, and engaging. Let's call it Enronia, for short.