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HBS Working Knowledge September 22, 2003 Theodore Kinni |
The Art of Appreciative Inquiry The process of "appreciative inquiry" gives your company a boost by leveraging what you already do well. Read how the 4-D technique -- discover, dream, design, and destiny -- is working everywhere from a casino to a coffee roaster.  |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 Edmondson & Kerwin |
DaimlerChrysler: Stalled Was the merger between Daimler and Chrysler a mistake? Many say yes -- and call for Schrempp's head.  |
BusinessWeek September 29, 2003 |
Erik Brynjolfsson, MIT Economist If e-business had an oracle, Erik Brynjolfsson would be the anointed. Companies from Dell to GM look to the economist and his team of researchers at MIT for answers on how to reap big productivity payoffs by combining e-business technology with organization changes.  |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Steve Hamm |
Borders Are So 20th Century High-tech transnationals take "stateless" to the next level.  |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Steve Hamm |
It's Not Easy Going Stateless Creating cohesive organizations that span long distances and different cultures is a challenge companies meet in different ways.  |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Paula Dwyer |
A Talk with William McDonough The new accounting oversight board's chairman says the profession should see the PCAOB (Public Company Accounting Oversight Board) as "its mentor-cum-ally."  |
CFO September 15, 2003 Peter Krass |
Behind the Music MTV's explosive growth prompts a substantial financial reengineering effort, one that even the most buttoned-down companies can learn from.  |
CFO September 15, 2003 |
IT Directions 2.0 Our annual survey of senior finance executives finds them bullish on the value of IT and prepared to raise budgets accordingly.  |
CFO September 15, 2003 Scott Leibs |
Finance Eye for the IT Guy? The instantaneous changes of reality TV are is much harder to pull off in the corporate sphere.  |
CFO September 15, 2003 Bob Violino |
Follow the Money Even in tough times, companies often fail to track corporate spending. New software may help.  |
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