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What is Great Leadership?

Great Leadership By Dan

Will upper management (Boomers/X’ers) see the value in including the Millennials is the long range planning process? Because of the economy and the fact that 401k plans are yet to rise to the level that they had attained pre -recession, the Boomers and the Traditionalist (small numbers) are still delaying their exit dates.

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How to Choose the Ideas Your Company Should Invest In

Harvard Business Review

After exploration, there are lots of ways to plan, but at the very least a good plan details the target customer, crucial stakeholders, the essence of the idea, key economics, the commercialization path, proposed operations, the team, financial requirements, and the action plan. Is the testing plan well thought out?

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Why We Need to Update Financial Reporting for the Digital Era

Harvard Business Review

Business students have traditionally considered net present value, payback period, and hurdle rates as necessary tools to determine which project to select. Given that even sophisticated investors cannot estimate the value of these companies, CFOs question the ability of a day trader to value a digital company.

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Reclaiming the Idea of Shareholder Value

Harvard Business Review

The first believes the company’s goal is to maximize shareholder value. Countries that operate under common law, including the United States and the United Kingdom, lean in this direction. Countries that operate under civil law, including France, Germany, and Japan, tend to be in this camp.

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Why Quants Should Manage Your Supply Chain Risk

Harvard Business Review

In an uncertain and volatile world, risk management — a previously unsexy subject for many managers who created annual updates or reviews of their company's risk management plans — is now a front-burner issue for many. CEOs and CFOs should consider rethinking who is managing risk in their global supply chains.

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Don’t Let Your Company Get Trapped by Success

Harvard Business Review

This can be quantified by analyzing the extent to which the share prices of S&P 500 firms are driven by a firm’s present value of future growth options (PVGO) rather than cash flow from current operations. Our research shows that U.S. Some firms manage to maintain this dual discipline as they grow.

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Warren Buffett's 2010 Shareholder Letter: What to Expect

Harvard Business Review

But why compare apples (book value) to oranges (share price and dividends)? Buffett explains that book value is the best proxy for "intrinsic value," the net present value of all estimated future cash flows. Consider that since 1965, Berkshire's book value grew 434,057% and the S&P index grew only 5,430%.

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