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  • Why Strong Ties Matter More In a Fast-Changing Environment

    New research by Marshall Van Alstyne challenges the existing theory about the value of strong ties versus weak ties.

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  • Uncommon Sense: How to Turn Distinctive Beliefs Into Action

    A company's beliefs are often the most critical source of differentiation.

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  • "Do-It-Yourself" Employee Health Care

    Motivated by rising health-care costs and commitment to their staff's health and productivity, many companies are taking matters into their own hands.

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  • Building a Well-Networked Organization

    Leaders and human resources professionals are searching for ways to generate more value from their employees. Recent studies show that companies perform at a higher level when they have integrated talent management programs that are aligned with business strategy and operations. Organizations can get more from their investments in talent management, the authors argue, by focusing on collaboration. Job design and performance management are typically based on individual accountability despite the fact that most work today is collaborative. Talent management practices tend to focus on individual competencies and experiences, while overlooking the importance of employee networks. By examining individual performance data together with the results of organizational network analysis, the authors say, senior managers can look at talent along two important dimensions. In addition to looking at individual employee performance for the purpose of succession or work force planning, they can take a network view to assess the same employees in terms of their broader collaborative contributions to the organization. The authors show how applying a network lens reveals a significant number of key players (including marginalized talent, hidden talent and underutilized talent) that traditional performance management systems miss. They identify best practices for nurturing networks through talent management initiatives, illustrating them with examples from organizations including IDEO, Nokia, Dow Chemical, Best Buy, Gallo and the U.S. Army.

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  • Creating Employee Networks That Deliver Open Innovation

    The key to open innovation? Ensuring outside ideas reach the people best equipped to exploit them.

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  • In Praise of Individual Innovators

    The Fall 2011 issue of MIT Sloan Management Review delves into innovation, including the intriguing role of individual innovators.

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  • Is Your Company Ready for Open Innovation?

    Without successful implementation, the benefits of open innovation strategies will not materialize.

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  • 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.

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  • The Power of Reconnection — How Dormant Ties Can Surprise You

    The Web has made it easier than ever to reconnect with long-lost professional colleagues. Does it pay to do so?

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  • Why Project Networks Beat Project Teams

    Project networks provide the expertise to handle complex, knowledge-intensive team projects.

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