Skip to content

Page 149 of 256

Latest

  • Can Marketing Lift Stock Prices?

    A study found that certain marketing techniques can influence a company's stock market valuation.

    Learn More »
  • First Look: The Second Annual New Intelligent Enterprise Survey

    How are companies using analytics in their decision making? To what extent are managers able to access the data they need? What are the key challenges, and how have the main business objectives changed? MIT Sloan Management Review and the IBM Institute for Business Value teamed up to ask business executives, managers and analysts to reflect on the role data plays within their organizations, and received more than 4,000 responses, representing every major industry and every region of the world. Complete results of the second annual survey are scheduled for publication in the fall 2011 issue, but this article provides some preliminary findings. A few early results stand out: Only about four in 10 respondents have access to the information they want; almost one-fifth say they have limited or no access to the data they need to be successful. The three biggest challenges people cite in using analytics are the difficulties of "integrating internal data across silos," the time and cost of performing analytics and the lack of skills to interpret and leverage the data. While the top three business objectives organizations cite for using analytics have not changed since last year's survey, their order of importance has changed: Last year, respondents said the most important objective was "innovating to achieve competitive differentiation;" this year, the No. 1 priority is "growing revenue," followed by "reducing costs and increasing efficiencies." Innovating to achieve competitive differentiation fell to No. 3. All told, the 2011 survey contained 27 questions. The charts in this preview article represent the answers to just eight of those, presented as simple raw data, clean and uncut. In the complete report, the new information will be combined and refined and, in many cases, compared to last year's data to give readers a snapshot of what's changed since our initial survey and the opportunity to benchmark their organizations in relation to their peers.

    Learn More »
  • How Gap Inc. Engaged With its Stakeholders

    When the Gap decided to overhaul the way it interacted with critics, it launched a strategy of stakeholder engagement.

    Learn More »
  • How Quality Drives the Rise and Fall of High-Tech Products

    While network effects do affect market share flows, quality prevails.

    Learn More »
  • How to Innovate When Platforms Won't Stop Moving

    What are the characteristics that can help guide companies through disruptive transitions?

    Learn More »
  • In Praise of Dissimilarity

    Sometimes products and markets that seemingly have noting in common "taxonomically" can have "thematic similarity," which may open up important business opportunities.

    Learn More »
  • Innovating in Uncertain Markets: 10 Lessons for Green Technologies

    Lessons from the successes and failures of many emerging technologies offer a helpful guide in how adoption works.

    Learn More »
  • Leveraging the Social Web Within the Enterprise

    How can large companies take advantage of the knowledge that is dispersed in various parts of their organizations? In an interview with MIT SMR, K. Ananth Krishnan, the CTO of Tata Consultancy Services, describes how he learns from his organization's collective intelligence.

    Learn More »
  • The Big Difference a Penny Makes

    Should you price a consumer product at a price that ends in 99 cents — or price it at a round dollar amount?

    Learn More »
  • The Business Models Investors Prefer

    Why have investors been so bullish on companies like Disney? It's their business models.

    Learn More »