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anonymous

Interorganizational business interactions - 0 views

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    Business process management in open environments remains a stubborn and important challenge. In open environments, autonomous organizations having heterogeneous information systems interact in an ever-evolving manner. The nature of the contractual relationships among such organizations has a significant bearing on the modeling of the business processes in which they participate. Conventional approaches are not suitable for open environments because (1) they lack support for modeling and management of contracts among organizations, (2) the modeling abstractions they offer do not afford crucial software engineering desiderata such as reuse, refinement, aggregation, and verification, and (3) they fail to provide the designers with guidelines on adapting the models should the underlying requirements change.\n\nWe propose a novel approach for engineering interorganizational business interactions. Contractual relationships are modeled via commitments and the interactions for enacting the contracts are captured via the modular abstraction of protocols. Relative to how organizations value the various terms of the contracts and how the contracts are played out via protocols, safety and benefit of the contracts are reasoned about. A protocol specifies rules that govern the interactions among the organizations. Protocols can be published to a repository, shared, reused, refined, and aggregated. We propose a methodology-Amoeba-that guides software designers in the face of evolving requirements on how the protocols and contracts can be adapted.
anonymous

The Return of the Non-Virtual Organization - Tom Davenport - HarvardBusiness.org - 0 views

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    I can't tell you how many companies I have worked with that have encouraged or tolerated a large degree of geographic dispersal among employees and management teams. "We're virtual, and proud of it," one told me. "It doesn't matter where you live anymore," many employees of virtualized companies have argued. "We travel all the time anyway," has been another frequent mantra.\n\nBut I recently encountered a company that is moving the other way. Eclipsys makes software for healthcare providers. The company's headquarters is in Atlanta. Last week, it changed CEOs. The previous CEO, Andrew Eckert, lived in Silicon Valley. By all accounts, he did a good job in the role, and the company has been doing well. However, the board of directors felt that the company couldn't be managed successfully from afar, and held discussions with Eckert about moving to Atlanta. He was committed for both family and career reasons to stay in California, however, and declined to move. The board decided to change leaders, and Philip Pead, who had previously headed and sold a healthcare software company in Atlanta, got the nod as the new CEO. Pead had moved to Miami, but is returning to Atlanta to run the company.
anonymous

Changing organizational structure to increase productivity - McKinsey Quarterly - Organ... - 0 views

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    About half a century ago, Peter Drucker coined the term "knowledge worker" to describe a new class of employee whose basic means of production was no longer capital, land, or labor but, rather, the productive use of knowledge. Today, these knowledge workers, who might better be called professionals, represent a large and growing percentage of the employees of the world's biggest corporations. In industries such as financial services, health care, high tech, pharmaceuticals, and media and entertainment, professionals now account for 25 percent or more of the workforce and, in some cases, undertake most typical key line activities. These talented people are the innovators of new business ideas. They make it possible for companies to deal with today's rapidly changing and uncertain business environment, and they produce and manage the intangible assets that are the primary way companies in a wide array of industries create value.
anonymous

T N T - The Network Thinker - 0 views

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    This blog is focused on "exploding" old concepts and thinking about economies, organizations, communities, and groups.\n\nWe will focus on patterns of connectivity and self-organizing behavior in economic and social networks and how these new structures lead to resilience, adaptability, agility, transparency, and innovation.
anonymous

The H-Bomb of Business Processes: Humans - 0 views

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    Let's talk efficiency, let's talk simplicity and leave the big words to others. Bottom line, from all the available pieces of technology on my laptop, nothing -- and I mean nothing -- compares to e-mail. We can reach anyone around the world in a split second, send any file, share ideas and get feedback. E-mail is our way to communicate and work together daily that is always tied to a business process being carried out in the organization. But in all actuality, e-mail is a problem. Basex Research recently estimated that businesses lose $650 billion annually in productivity due to unnecessary e-mail interruptions and overload.
anonymous

The Enterprise 2.0 Recovery Plan : Andrew McAfee's Blog - 0 views

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    Recent events in the news have inspired a thought experiment: I asked myself what I would do if I were put in charge of IT as part of the turnaround effort at a big US automaker. To be a bit more specific, I imagined that one of the big 3 American auto companies was taken over tomorrow by enlightened and aggressive new leadership whose only goals are to restore the company to operational and financial excellence. This leadership is enlightened (in my book) because it believes firmly in the power of IT to help businesses achieve their goals and differentiate themselves in the marketplace, and will fund and fully support whatever initiatives I propose (this is a complete fantasy for several reasons, but thought experiments aren't supposed to be constrained by reality.).\nSo what would I propose?
anonymous

Chambers on Process and Cultural Change | ZDNet - 0 views

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    ""…we talk about technology and get excited about it, but changing processes is the only way to get productivity … so I think you've got to align with people who can help you with process and cultural change because those will trip you up or prevent you from getting the technology benefits"."
anonymous

Wirearchy · Productivity in a Networked Era - Assessing ROII (Return on Inves... - 0 views

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    Today's networked era requires a new way to make investment decisions that incorporates intangible assets and more accurately depicts how value is created. The industrial age has run out of steam. Look at General Motors. Look at Chrysler. We are witnessing the death throes of management models that have outlived their usefulness. The network era now replacing the industrial age holds great promise. Networked organizations are reaping rewards for connecting people, know-how and ideas at an ever-faster pace. Value creation has migrated from what we can see (physical assets) to intangibles (ideas). Look at Google and Cisco.
anonymous

Everything - On The System - 0 views

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    An intellect which at a certain moment would know all forces that set nature in motion, and all positions of all items of which nature is composed, if this intellect were also vast enough to submit these data to analysis, it would embrace in a single formula the movements of the greatest bodies of the universe and those of the tiniest atom; for such an intellect nothing would be uncertain and the future just like the past would be present before its eyes.
anonymous

Your Employees Are Your Customers, But Are They Buying? - HBR Now - Harvard Business Re... - 0 views

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    Your best salespeople possess vast knowledge about how to connect with and motivate people--and perhaps take the company to the next level. But they rarely get to share their knowledge with senior managers. As a practitioner and student of business-to-business selling for more than half a century, Clif Reichard has learned to translate sales knowledge into leadership knowledge.
Gary Tong

DT Communications China: Hong Kong Event Management - PR & Social Media Agency | Event ... - 1 views

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    DT Communications is the largest and leading agency in China and Asia with the focus in digital strategies. With offices operating across Asia Pacific regions, DT team is specialized in the domains of corporate strategy, public relations, event management, digital monitoring and marketing.
anonymous

The insidious effects of building your network | The Xpragmatic View - 0 views

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    Networks bring the promise of linking us to uniqueness and diversity, but our human feelings too often guide us towards uniformity and average thinking
subhrakant jena

indian manufacturers - 0 views

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    Way2trading.com - world's local B2B Marketplace of manufacturers,suppliers,exporters,buyers online business directory and largest yellow pages,Buy Sell offers from india & foreign Countries
Gary Tong

An insight into china travel market - 0 views

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    One may as well consider this piece of fact as old news that the general people in China in the present century are getting empowered with better income and better lives every passing year. This has resulted in the millions and millions of citizens to give a shot at all luxuries that the world has in store to offer.
Gary Tong

Buiness Guide & communications: Online and digital marketing research, analysis and dev... - 0 views

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    We are a communications-based PR firm that does anything and everything ranging from events to digital media campaigns, everywhere
anonymous

Collaborative Culture, or the Real Enterprise 2.0 - 0 views

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    The "real" Enterprise 2.0 is not a technology or marketing plan, but the reinvention of the enterprise itself. It's a rethinking of the structure, process, culture and even, in some cases, the very purpose of the enterprise. With technology erasing barriers to participation and communication, we're seeing a change in the nature of how we go about running an organization.
anonymous

Gary Hamel: HCL's Vineet Nayar on its 'Management Makeover' - Gary Hamel's Management 2... - 0 views

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    A couple of weeks back I (Gary Hamel) provided you with a synopsis of Vineet Nayar's new book, "Employees First, Customers Second," which has been recently published by Harvard Business School Press. In it, Vineet, CEO of HCL Technologies, talks about the progress his company has made in making managers more accountable to those on the front lines. Having posted my summary, I invited you to submit your questions to Vineet, and many of you did, along with plenty of piquant comments. Herewith, Vineet's reply. He begins by providing a bit of context, and then takes on a few of the most-asked queries.
anonymous

The case for Business Interaction Management (BIM) - 0 views

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    In this white paper, we introduce the concept of Business Interaction Management (BIM). We explore the reasons that make that there is a need for a better understanding and mastering of such expertise and we position it against better-known disciplines such as Business Process Management (BPM).
anonymous

Enterprise 2.0: The Kumbaya irony | IT Leadership | TechRepublic.com - 0 views

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    Last week I attended the Enterprise 2.0 conference in Boston. It's one of my favorite events, primarily because so many online friends attend from around the world and I enjoy their company. Despite overwhelming good will among participants, the conference exposed gaps between expectations and reality that continue to plague the Enterprise 2.0 world.
anonymous

The Return of the Non-Virtual Organization - Tom Davenport - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    I can't tell you how many companies I have worked with that have encouraged or tolerated a large degree of geographic dispersal among employees and management teams. "We're virtual, and proud of it," one told me. "It doesn't matter where you live anymore," many employees of virtualized companies have argued. "We travel all the time anyway," has been another frequent mantra.
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