article thumbnail

Create The Future And The Innovation Handbook

Eric Jacobson

Flip the book over, and you have Gutsche’s updated and expanded, bestselling, Exploiting Chaos , book now called, The Innovation Handbook , featuring memorable real-world case studies and plenty of thought-provoking questions to inspire next steps for innovation. It's the ideal guide to turn your big idea into a reality.

article thumbnail

First Look: Leadership Books for March 2020

Leading Blog

Marketers want to change their customers’ minds and leaders want to change organizations. Create the Future + the Innovation Handbook : Tactics for Disruptive Thinking by Jeremy Gutsche. Create the Future is paired with a revised edition of Jeremy's award-winning innovation handbook, Exploiting Chaos. But change is hard.

Books 379
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Are You Falling for the Myth of "Failing to Plan is Planning to Fail"?

Great Leadership By Dan

When was the last time you saw a major planned project suffer from a cost overrun ? It’s not as common as you might think for a project with a clear plan to come in at or under budget. For instance, a 2002 study of major construction projects found that 86% went over budget. First, break down each project into component parts.

Planning 215
article thumbnail

How To Create Your Future

Eric Jacobson

Flip the book over, and you have Gutsche’s updated and expanded, bestselling, Exploiting Chaos , book now called, The Innovation Handbook , featuring memorable real-world case studies and plenty of thought-provoking questions to inspire next steps for innovation. It's the ideal guide to turn your big idea into a reality.

How To 65
article thumbnail

Sustaining Collaboration for Decades

Mills Scofield

The continuity and stability of MPC’s core values is a bulwark against market, industry and global cycles. The teams reported to Union and Management leadership on what they felt and thought about their project, what they learned, the current state, the future desired state and finished by asking for approval to actually do the project.

article thumbnail

New Books from the Press for Early Summer

Harvard Business Review

Soon consumers will be able to: (1) control the flow and use of personal data, (2) build their own loyalty programs, (3) dictate their own terms of service, and (4) tell whole markets what they want, how they want it, where and when they should be able to get it, and how much it should cost. by Bill Lee. by Donald N. If so, read on.

Books 10
article thumbnail

Hiring an Intern? What to Do Before the Summer Starts

Harvard Business Review

Recently, the marketing director for a tech start-up told me that her CEO was furiously drafting job descriptions for a half-dozen summer interns. As the director of marketing looked at her CEO quizzically, she asked, "you know you need to manage all those interns, right?". Interns are great for project-based work.

Mentor 8