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Kamis, 20 September 2007

Sun Tzu and the Art of Business: Six Strategic Principles for Managers

by Mark R. McNeilly

List Price: $19.95
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Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (2/28/2000)
ISBN: 0195137892
Edition: New Ed
Paperback: 272 pages
Dimensions: 8 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
Average Customer Review: based on 14 reviews.

More than two millennia ago the famous Chinese general Sun Tzu wrote the classic work on military strategy, The Art of War. Now, in Sun Tzu and the Art of Business, Mark R. McNeilly shows how Sun Tzu's strategic principles can be successfully applied to modern business situations. Here are really two books in one: McNeilly's synthesis of Sun Tzu's ideas into six strategic principles for the business executive, plus the entire text of Samuel B. Griffith's popular translation of The Art of War. Within, McNeilly explains how to gain market share without inciting competitive retaliation, how to attack a competitor's weak points, and how to maximize the power of market information for competitive advantage. He also demonstrates the value of speed, preparation, and secrecy in throwing the competition off-balance, employing strategy to beat the competition, and the need for character in successful leaders. In his final chapter, McNeilly presents a practical method to put Sun Tzu and The Art of Business into practice. By using modern examples throughout the book from GE, Microsoft, ATandT, BMW, Southwest Airlines, FedEx, and many others, he illustrates how, by following the wisdom of history's most respected strategist, executives can avoid the pitfalls of management fads and achieve lasting competitive advantage.

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Minggu, 02 September 2007

7 Tips to Working at Home Successfully

HighEdWebDev conference. This year the conference has moved to downtown Rochester and should offer more to do each evening. Earlier today, three colleagues from Penn State and I did a second run of our Paper Prototyping workshop, the first being earlier this year at [...]
Education Task Force Interviews. The Web Standards Project Education Task Force has published three interviews since the first of the year.

Usability and Paper Prototyping. Today, at the Penn State Web Conference, a group of Web Professionals at Penn State had the opportunity to present a workshop on usability using paper prototyping.

Refrigerator Art. My grandson, who recently celebrated his fifth birthday has created his first, real piece of refrigerator art. I'm proud to say that he drew a picture of his family. A quite like his rendition of my hair.

CSS Hacks. Tantek Çelik has written an excellent article exploring CSS hacks. He covers a lot of ground and wraps up the article by stating that one should write cross browser validating code. He cautions developers only to use CSS hacks and filters at a minimum. He finishes the article asking all of us to keep up [...]
HighEdWebDev Report. I recently attended the HighEdWebDev conference in Rochester, New York. As part of my work with the Web Standards Project Education Task Force (WaSP EduTF), I wrote a report on my experiences and observations at the conference.
Beyond New Professionalism. As a member of the WaSP Education Task Force http://www.webstandards.org/act/campaign/edutf/ , this article has been cross-posted from http://www.webstandards.org/buzz/archive/2005_11.html#a000591 to take your comments (Original article written by Holly Marie Koltz). In Molly’s recent WaSP buzz, Web Standards and The New Professionalism she offers: Today, I want to express that I believe that this new professionalism means taking [...]

HighEdWebDev 2005 - Conclusion. HighEdWebDev 2005 has now ended and I’ve made my way home to Central Pennsylvania. The opportunity for me to attend many conferences has never been available, so this has been one of the few conferences that I have attended. That being said, I have only one word to describe this conference; superb. I’ve been to [...]

HighEdWebDev 2005 - Day 3. Day 3 at HighEdWebDev and more excellent presentations. Jon Linczak gave an excellent two hour presentation on Lenya and it’s deployment at Hiram College. Jon covered a lot of ground and mentioned more than once that everyone should be using web standards in their work. After lunch, Rose Pruyne’s presentation on “Roll Your Own Content Management [...]

HighEdWebDev - Day 2. Day 2 of the HighEdWebDev 2005 conference is well underway.

Read from: http://education.knowledgewalley.com/

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Kamis, 30 Agustus 2007

Business: Planning For Growth

by Paul Lemberg

Are you planning your business or are you planning your growth?

If you are like many high-performing business people, you have an annual ritual to set your plans for the coming twelve months. Some people do it in December, others at weird, miscellaneous times of the year, but most -- me included -- tend to do it the beginning part of the New Year.

It doesn't matter exactly when you do this, but it is important you do it sometime soon. It has been said all the way back to the time of the ancients: goals and written plans for their attainment are the surest way to speed up your accomplishments. So skipping this step is not an option!

As you buckle down to this critical task, consider: are you planning for business as usual or are you planning for wonderful, extraordinary, growth? Many people feel kind of beaten down by the past three years of economic mis-performance and think a year in which profits don't retreat will be a good year.

Others--most people--will plan to do something very much like they did in 2003; perhaps they will try to do it a bit better. They may look at the surplus resources they have available (if any) and try to figure out how they can eke out a little more performance, profit and revenue -- without taking any big risks or doing anything radical. And for the most part, it will be business as usual.

Ho hum...

Don't be either of these types...

Plan to do something extraordinary!

Plan to extend or expand or excel.

And regardless of the economic forecast--which in the US is good, and in other places not so good--plan to create a breakthrough in your business.

Sounds good... How?

First, some fundamentals. Unless you have invented something never before seen in the world, there are only four components to having a profitable business:

1. Have a large enough--and rich enough--market;

2. Have products or services your market wants and is willing to pay for;

3. Have a cost efficient way to obtain (and deliver) the product or service; and,

4. Have a cost efficient way to sell your product or service.

And regardless of what you may have heard in the past, there are only three ways to increase your revenue:

* Sell to more customers;

* Sell more to the same customers with each transaction; and,

* Sell the same customers more often.

Think about it...

Because while all of this may seem obvious and trivial, careful consideration of these seven simple statements will provide you some mighty powerful insights into how to have a breakthrough in your business.

Second, your job is to turn these statements into the right questions.

Questions like, "How can I sell more customer?" Or, "What services can I add to my product mix to increase the size of an average transaction?" Or even, "Am I selling to the right (large enough and rich enough) market?"

Asking the right questions will fire off thought processes that can make you money--lots of it--provided you answer the questions and act on your answers.

Say your business sells software to plumbing supply houses. You expect the pace of building to cool off a bit this year because of global interest rate increases, which will mean that your customers will have less money to upgrade their computer systems this year. "How to sell to more customers" might not be the right question this year. But asking "how can I sell more to my current customers" might lead to an idea to develop a coaching or consulting service that helps them increase their profits--by using your software--even in a down plumbing supply market.

You could potentially sell this service to every single one of your customers! That would be some breakthrough.

And asking, "how can I sell to my past customers" could yield an additional windfall as those guys will really need your help.

Or perhaps you sell web-based information to stock market traders, and the market is heating up again. You know that more "players" will be entering the game, and you know most of them will lose their shirts (again) if they don't get some help fast.

Asking "how can I cost-effectively sell to more customers quickly" might lead you to some powerful joint-venture strategies. And thinking about joint ventures could lead you the question '"how can I provide value to my competitors' products" which could open up a whole new market for you. Another breakthrough.

Can you see how asking questions will help you plan for extraordinary growth?

The right questions, answered in the proper order gives you what I call a Growth Strategy Roadmap. This process will direct your thinking to create breakthroughs on demand. Sound impossible? It's not... I have seen it work over and over. In fact, I've been helping people grow their businesses for years--by showing them how to ask these critical business-building questions.

The third thing you must do, after you ask the right questions, is invent answers to those questions... and then you have to act on those answers. Of course, putting together an effective growth plan is a time consuming process, and there are lots of places for missteps that will lead to bad conclusions. But the benefits can be huge.

Taken from: http://www.getmyarticles.com/

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