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  • Common good
    An interview with Lord Stephen Green, UK Minister for Trade and Investment
  • Did you say "free"?
    What it takes to win in a world where “free” is the optimum price point by Mike Simonetto, Maggie Laird and Denys Aguirrebeitia.
  • Charging ahead
    Henry Ford didn’t invent the automobile, but his Model T influenced manufacturing for generations. The advent of the battery electric vehicle—sometimes viewed as an incremental change to an iconic product—may reshape the value chain and perhaps society.
  • Geeks, tweets and cash
    A conversation with Riley Crane of MIT Media Lab.
  • Good medicine or a bitter pill
    Explore the implications of health care reform for businesses in America.
  • It’s a mad, mad, mad, mad world
    How rational managers came to be seen as reckless risk takers … but have been behaving sensibly all along.
  • The battle for brands in a world of private labels
    Many consumers sense little difference between the quality of national brands and their private label counterparts as retailers focus on store brands and consumer product companies cede connections to retailers and customers.
  • Three levels of pull
    Our economy is chock-a-block with businesses that maximize efficiency at scale. They presume predictability to mass-produce and mass-market products. Yet this “push” view is no longer a path to leadership.
  • Post merger integration
    Much common wisdom surrounding post merger integration is anecdotal, at best. An empirical examination of one of the world’s largest PMI databases suggests a set of risk factors that help define risk profiles.
  • Survival of the Fattest
    The best performing firms have seen their profitability surge. The worst performing are doing worse than ever. In the middle, however, performance is in decline even as the asset base controlled by ever more mediocre firms.
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