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eCFO December 2000 Tim Reason |
Batteries Not Included For some CFOs, high-tech takeovers can make for some unduly difficult due diligence...  |
Reason March 2001 John Mueller |
St. Phineas How P.T. Barnum helped invent business ethics...  |
Fast Company March 2001 Ron Lieber |
Give Us This Day Our Global Bread Think of a product that is so local, it could never go global. So basic, it could never be branded. So fundamental, it could never be reinvented. Now think about bread -- Lionel Poilane's bread, that is...  |
Fast Company March 2001 Keith H. Hammonds |
Michael Porter's Big Ideas The world's most famous business-school professor is fed up with CEOs who claim that the world changes too fast for their companies to have a long-term strategy. If you want to make a difference as a leader, you've got to make time for strategy...  |
Fast Company March 2001 Tom Peters |
Rule #3: Leadership Is Confusing As Hell You think the past five years were nuts? You ain't seen nothin' yet! It's only going to get weirder, tougher, and more turbulent. Which means that leadership will be more important than ever -- and more confusing (see rule #3)...  |
Fast Company March 2001 |
Smart Steps What smart steps should business leaders be taking to deal with Act II of the new economy? Maybe the smartest thing to do is to take stock of Act I: What lessons did we learn in the first five years of the new economy?  |
Fast Company March 2001 George Anders |
Steve Ballmer's Big Moves Microsoft's CEO faces a challenge that has been the undoing of many leaders in many industries: Can a giant company that dominated one era lead in the next?  |
Fast Company March 2001 Amy Wilson Sheldon |
Chief E-Cubator Job Titles of the Future - Marnie Anderson...  |
Fast Company March 2001 Charles Fishman |
Face Time With Michael Dell The still-youthful founder and CEO of the technology powerhouse gets personal (sort of) about taking apart a computer, dropping out of college , and making breakfast for his kids...  |
Fast Company March 2001 Alison Overholt |
Intel's Got (Too Much) Mail Intel averages 3 million email messages per day. That's enough to choke even the fastest-moving company. Here's a short course on how the Silicon Valley giant gets the most out of those messages...  |
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