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Hans De Keulenaer

The promise of prediction markets: A roundatble - The McKinsey Quarterly - prediction m... - 0 views

  • Every senior executive knows that business decisions are seldom better than the information behind them. Yet although it is usually lower-level employees who interact directly with the customer, decision makers rarely ask them how, for example, new products will fare. Leaders therefore deprive themselves of information that could enrich their analysis and reduce the risk of ivory tower decision making. Some executives understand that valuable information lies scattered around the organization but don’t know how to retrieve it. Others don’t even try, perhaps for hierarchical reasons or because they suspect they might get answers colored by the desire to second their real or assumed viewpoint.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Future of Decision Making: Less Intuition, More Evidence - Andrew McAfee - Harvard ... - 0 views

  • This is deeply misguided advice. We should rely less, not more, on intuition. A huge body of research has clarified much about how intuition works, and how it doesn't. Here's some of what we've learned:
Hans De Keulenaer

Psychological Influence in Negotiation: An Introduction Long Overdue - HBS Working Know... - 0 views

  • This paper attempts to encourage a better dialogue between research on social influence and on negotiation. It provides an overview of the literature on both areas, and identifies opportunities for creating more effective and useful research. First, HBS professors Deepak Malhotra and Max Bazerman identify those elements of psychological influence that do not require the influencer to change the economic or structural aspects of the bargaining situation in order to persuade the target. Second, they review prior research on behavioral decision-making in negotiation to identify those ideas that may be relevant to influence in negotiation. Third, they provide a framework for thinking about how to leverage behavioral decision research to wield influence in negotiation. Fourth, they consider how targets of influence might defend against these tactics. Fifth, because psychological influence is, by definition, aimed at achieving one's own ends through the strategic manipulation of another's judgment, they consider the ethical issues surrounding its application in negotiation.
Hans De Keulenaer

Google Reader - 0 views

shared by Hans De Keulenaer on 22 Oct 07 - Cached
  • A panel run by David Armano on Social Media in a B2B world had a panelist from Leopardo Construction, Todd Andrilik. Todd, who’s the company’s director of marketing and PR, is using a wordpress blog as a newsroom .
  • It was a huge event, with close to 2,000 participants and a palpable energy and a sense of - finally - progress. The conference was attended by the ministers for energy or senior political representatives  from several countries (the UK, Germany, several Nordic countries - see the link above) and happened at the same time as an important German government meeting that decided to increase offshore tariffs to 14c/kWh, a strongly supportive measure which is likely to be the starting point of a massive wave of investment in the sector in that country. Interestingly, despite that decision, and the excitement it generated, the UK market is still seen as likely to be bigger than the German one over the next 10-15 years, with all other markets being somewhat smaller.
  • With tongue in cheek and apologies to the Wal-Mart version we have all heard, please consider these thoughts that are sure to help us NOT achieve sustainability in 2008.
Hans De Keulenaer

55 Essential Articles Every Serious Blogger Should Read | Entrepreneurial Blog of Matt ... - 0 views

  • 55 essential articles I’ve come across that have positively influenced my blog decision-making and will undoubtedly help you too. I’ve also included a select few of my own past articles that are of relevance in order to “pay it forward.”
Hans De Keulenaer

ClickZ: Facebook as a B2B Marketing Tool - 0 views

  • More of a surprise is what Facebook is poised to become next: a B2B (define) networking and marketing platform that attracts corporate executives and decision makers.
Hans De Keulenaer

Why You Need Three Different Types of Value Proposition - BetterManagement.com - 0 views

  • Segment-based. In the epiphany and awareness stages, with minimal client information, the value proposition is defined to address the needs of a specific market segment. The segment-based value proposition is not designed to sell. The purpose of the statement is to get potential buyers to take action to learn more. That action can be going to your Website, picking up the phone to call you, attending a Webinar, or reading a white paper. Role-based. Moving from the awareness to interest stages, the value propositions become more targeted to subsegments and specific roles within organizations, such as CIOs, sales management, or business unit leaders. Such individuals often have different perceptions of value based on their roles and responsibilities. Role-based value propositions resonate when they address the specific business needs of the people or personas the company is trying to reach. They require a deeper level of understanding of the like-minded groups of people the company is communicating with, including their needs, desires, motivations, expectations, goals, fears, skills, and biases. Client-specific. These value propositions are designed to move prospects from interest to confidence or buy mode. The client-specific value proposition addresses the particular needs of actual, not archetypal, clients. However, knowing the client goes beyond defining the decision influencers’ and makers’ titles and roles. It also means knowing the client’s educational background, personal pursuits, association memberships, business goals and how they are measured, the client’s definition of success, and, of course, the client’s pain points.
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