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Hardcover Winning Through Innovation: A Practical Guide to Leading Organizational Change and Renewal Book

ISBN: 1578518210

ISBN13: 9781578518210

Winning Through Innovation: A Practical Guide to Leading Organizational Change and Renewal

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Book Overview

Tushman and O'Reilly examine how leadership, culture, and organizational architectures can be both important facilitators of innovation and, not uncommonly, formidable obstacles. They demonstrate how to clarify today's critical managerial problems, use culture and commitment to promote innovation and implement strategy, and deal with changing innovation requirements as organizations evolve.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Explains a lot about why success breeds failure

When I first read this book in 2000, I thought it was a penetrating analysis of the dynamics of large organizations and the tendency they have to be very good at doing the same thing; but then get stuck in the past and can't change. As we live through the credit crisis and the fall of once great names like Lehman Brothers I've come back to it for explanations of what's been going on. How can it be that the more successful you are the less likely it is that you will see the causes of your own downfall? Another reviewer says this book compares poorly with Christansen's Innovator's Dilemma. But unlike Christansen, Tushman and O'Reilly offer a broader explanation for the phenomenon that gets at the guts of modern organizations. This book may lack the intellectual gratification that Christansen provides but is stacked with common sense. The authors go beyond business school authodoxy and offer practical guidance on how to avoid the traps that they describe so vividly. Tushman first proposed the idea of 'organization alignment' or 'congruence' in the late 80s. Here he and O'Reilly bring that idea alive in several case studies based on their own research. They also advance the notion of the 'ambidextrous organization' as a way of managing a business through the innovators dilemma. The sections on culture may be too long for some, I didn't think so. What I find useful is the specific nature of the cases and definitions used; culture as something real and tangible. If only a few more banking CEOs had taken the time to understand the threat their own culture was creating for them.

United States managers recognized the importance of designing workplaces that stimulate creativity a

Inertia and status quo will undermine, need innovation. 2. Organization crisis often triggers substantial innovation and change. 3. Companies proactively generate crises and opportunities by creating and solving problems. 4. Excellent managers are those whose unit have no performance gaps today but are able to define future opportunities to energize the organization now. 5. Managers must be clear about products, markets, technology, and timing and define objectives or standards to access performance. 6. A vision people can believe in can add passion and enthusiasm to an organization. A vision people do not understand or believe in undermines management's credibility and is a source of great cynicism. 7. When vision helps create the core values of an organization, it can provide the foundation for the culture or social control system essential in rapidly changing environments. 8. The essence of a vision company is the translation of ideology into goals, strategy, tactics, and policies, processes, and every thing that the company does. 9. Vision must be accessed against actual performance. 10. Managers prioritize performance gaps and make clear the most critical problems. 11. Managers can create opportunities gaps by raising performance standards. 12. Organizational learning is about finding good-enough solutions to important problems. 13. If strategy or vision is wrong, no amount of diagnosis and root cause analysis will help. 14. If a diagnosis reveals in congruencies between one or two organizational building blocks, incremental change is possible. 15. Norms are widely shared and strong held social expectations. Compliance to the norm is considered right. Noncompliance is punishable. Variance exist across an organization and its subunits. 16. Organizations with widely shared norms and values often show great consistency of attitudes and behavior. When core values are diffuse, operating norms are apt to be diffuse. 17. It is difficult to actively shape core values and culture without a clearly articulated competitive vision. 18. Finding the right strategy, vision, and purpose are essential for long-term success and have important motivational properties. 19. Without credible strategy and profit, people won't pay much attention to any so-called noble purpose. 20. Widely shared norms can be powerful determinants for attitudes and behavior. 21. Control comes from the knowledge that someone who matters to us is paying close attention to what we are doing and will tell us how we are doing. 22. A social control system's effectiveness is measure against whether is supports or hinders managers in accomplishing their critical tasks. 23. Providing clear and consistent signals about what is important and should be attended to and what is inappropriate and should not be tolerated is how managers help people focus. 24. People want to contribute their talents at work. "What America does right" 25. In a study of 2

The greatest business book I have ever read

I read many business books - from Drucker to Peters, etc., but this one is very insightful, practical, and easy to follow! One day I will own my own business and this book will be by my side!

Discontinuinity To Remain Competitive

Many successful companies continue to live onto their past success stories and forget the drastic changes taking place in the market. This symptom ultimately makes their successes short-lived and their market positioning easily challenged,and overtaken, by other not-so-famous competitors. To evade such perils, this book explains lucidly the idea of discontinuous innovations through which "culture of innovation" can be obtained and finally reach to an ambidextrous organization. Without innovation no organization can ever think of surviving in this cut-throat competitive market. The concepts in the books are easy to understand via appropriate examples and related explanation.

provocative, insightful, and essential reading

I hardly ever read business books, but this held my interest to the end. I now have a very successful business, and I largely credit the ideas in this book for helping me get through some hard challenges
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