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106 items were found using the following search criteria
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Yum! China (Spanish version)
Bell, David E.; Shelman, MaryCase HBS-517S06StrategySince the first KFC opened in China in 1987, Yum--under Sam Su's leadership--had built the largest restaurant company by far in mainland China. Averaging one new restaurant opening a day for the past five years, in 2010 Yum ran over 3,600 restaurants in 650 cities and employed over 250,000 people, many of them college students in their first jobs. In the third quarter of 2010, Yum China's revenues surpassed U.S. revenues for the first time and ma...Starting at €8.20
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I Think of My Failures as a Gift (Spanish version)
Lafley, A.G.; Dillon, KarenArticle HBS-R1104FStrategyno winning strategic reason for the acquisition; integrating poorly or too slowly; expecting synergies that didn't materialize; incompatible cultures; company leaders who "couldn't play together in the same sandbox." That analysis led to changes that informed P&G's highly successful acquisition of Gillette in 2005.Starting at €8.20
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Strategies for Learning from Failure
Edmondson, Amy C.Article HBS-R1104B-ELeadership and People ManagementMany executives believe that all failure is bad (although it usually provides lessons)-and that learning from it is pretty straightforward. The author, a professor at Harvard Business School, thinks both beliefs are misguided. In organizational life, sheStarting at €8.20
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"I Think of My Failures as a Gift"
Lafley, A.G.; Dillon, KarenArticle HBS-R1104F-ELafley, the former CEO of Procter & Gamble, is regarded as one of the most successful chief executives in recent history. But like everyone else, he's had his share of mistakes. Politicians and winning sports teams draw their biggest lessons from their toughest losses, he says, and the same has been true for him. The company learned more from its failed new brands and products than from its successes. Among Lafley's favorite examples is the color...Starting at €8.20
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Why Leaders Don't Learn from Success (Spanish version)
Gino, Francesca; Pisano, Gary P.Article HBS-R1104DLeadership and People ManagementWhat causes so many companies that once dominated their industries to slide into decline? In this article, two Harvard Business School professors argue that such firms lose their touch because success breeds failure by impeding learning at both the individual and organizational levels. When we succeed, we assume that we know what we are doing, but it could be that we just got lucky. We make what psychologists call fundamental attribution errors, ...Starting at €8.20
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Failing by Design
McGrath, Rita GuntherArticle HBS-R1104E-ELeadership and People ManagementIt's hardly news that business leaders work in increasingly uncertain environments, where failures are bound to be more common than successes. Yet if you ask executives how well, on a scale of one to 10, their organizations learn from failure, you'll often get a sheepish "Two-or maybe three" in response. Such organizations are missing a big opportunity: Failure may be inevitable but, if managed well, can be very useful. A certain amount of failur...Starting at €8.20
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Strategies for Learning from Failure (Spanish version)
Edmondson, Amy C.Article HBS-R1104BLeadership and People Managementpreventable ones in predictable operations, which usually involve deviations from spec; unavoidable ones in complex systems, which may arise from unique combinations of needs, people, and problems; and intelligent ones at the frontier, where "good" failures occur quickly and on a small scale, providing the most valuable information. Strong leadership can build a learning culture-one in which failures large and small are consistently reported and...Starting at €8.20
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Why Leaders Don't Learn from Success
Gino, Francesca; Pisano, Gary P.Article HBS-R1104D-ELeadership and People ManagementWhat causes so many companies that once dominated their industries to slide into decline? In this article, two Harvard Business School professors argue that such firms lose their touch because success breeds failure by impeding learning at both the individual and organizational levels. When we succeed, we assume that we know what we are doing, but it could be that we just got lucky. We make what psychologists call fundamental attribution errors, ...Starting at €8.20
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IBM China Development Lab Shanghai: Capability by Design
Shih, Willy; Bliznashki, Kamen; Zhao, FanCase HBS-611055-ETo maximize their effectiveness, color cases should be printed in color. When IBM shifted from a traditional territory-based multinational organization to what it called a globally integrated enterprise, it established its headquarters for "Growth Markets" in Shanghai and "Established Markets" in New York. This positioned its China Development Labs (CDL) in Shanghai as a key platform for serving growth markets including the BRIC countries and oth...Starting at €8.20
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MindTree: A Community of Communities, Teaching Note
Garvin, David A.Teaching Note HBS-312023-ETeaching Note for 311049.Starting at €0.00