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Disruptive or incremental innovation? The former is disruptive innovation and although rare, it can happen, while the latter is incremental innovation. And how do you balance the two to find the next big thing in your industry? Disruptive Innovation. The first is that there’s no disruptive innovation without it.
When disruption came for the taxi industry, the music industry, the retail industry, and others, there were usually four flashing lights that just about anyone could see. When disruption is barreling down on you, the worst place to stand is the middle of the road. Disruption is the new normal in the global, mobile, digital world.
find new ideas and examples to disrupt your industry. Some of the most notable and disruptive inventions of tomorrow will require a paradigmatic change in the way we interpret things today, in the way we perform tasks, in the technologies and resources we have access to. What if all your employees were freelancers?
find new ideas and examples to disrupt your industry. Some of the most notable and disruptive inventions of tomorrow will require a paradigmatic change in the way we interpret things today, in the way we perform tasks, in the technologies and resources we have access to. What if all your employees were freelancers?
With larger volumes of data being used to analyze everything from the genome to traffic patterns and lunch choices, it is natural to ask whether bigdata can crack the code on small business credit risk. There is reason for optimism.
The first is high-quality data from two corporate surveys conducted by MGI and McKinsey in 2007, one of around 1,600 executives across industries globally on digital technologies and AI to ascertain the causes of economic impact and the likely pace of that impact, and one of more than 3,000 corporations in 14 sectors in ten countries.
And it’s not just the financial results that are impressive — Huffington Post has won a Pulitzer Prize, as has Politico, a news organization launched in 2007. We live in an age of disruption , and in order to compete, everyone must adapt. The Huffington Post was sold for $315 million in just six years. Publishing start-ups are hot.
Meanwhile, President Obama seems happy to preside over this Orwellian affair with a newfound disregard for the basic privacy rights of citizens, which he previously expressed with great vigor back in 2005 and 2007, when he was still just a senator (watch these NYT videos ). This is incredible — life is indeed stranger than fiction!
And tracking has become steadily more prevalent as marketing’s appetite for “bigdata” and “personalized” ad messages has grown from hunger to gluttony. The FTC saw this happening already in 2007 and proposed “to create a national Do Not Track List similar to the national Do Not Call list.”
With larger volumes of data being used to analyze everything from the genome to traffic patterns and lunch choices, it is natural to ask whether bigdata can crack the code on small business credit risk. There is reason for optimism.
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