Remove Operations Remove Productivity Remove Public Relations Remove Supply Chain
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How Dumb Is Your Business?

N2Growth Blog

Posted on October 13th, 2010 by admin in Operations & Strategy By Mike Myatt , Chief Strategy Officer, N2growth How dumb is your business? If your company can’t be operated by mere mortals, you need to reexamine your business logic. It applies to your branding, marketing, supply chain, and ultimately to your customer base.

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The Downside of Best Practices | N2Growth Blog

N2Growth Blog

It has been my experience that whenever methodologies become productized objectivity is removed from the equation. Whenever you are being pitched a product as a solution I suggest you exercise extreme caution. As always, I welcome your comments below… Share and Enjoy: View Comments myersk Agree.

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How Leaders Can Keep Their Cool in a Crisis

Harvard Business Review

And those that deal with public relations challenges regularly have still been caught off guard by a customer insurgency. But sometimes it’s a symptom of a deeper problem in your culture, product, or operating model. But these days, crises have become a regular state of affairs. ” Fix the underlying problem.

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Don’t Trust Your Company’s Reputation to the Quants

Harvard Business Review

Consider the reputation damage caused by product failure at GM, or unpopular workplace practices at Walmart, or the multibillion dollar fines for fraud levied against Bank of America – which, not incidentally, came in dead last in a recent Harris Interactive reputation ranking. Products and services. Emotional appeal.

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What Companies Have Learned from Losing Billions in Emerging Markets

Harvard Business Review

Those losses stemmed not from poor product, marketing, or supply chain decisions but from regulatory violations, loss of business and fines resulting from bribery and fraud, and concomitant reputational damage. Local subsidiaries have to operate in ways acceptable to the parent company. You have to comply.