January 18, 2018

Business Conceptualization - Management Insights from Economics, Engineering Economics, Managerial Economics, Industrial Economics

Principles of Management Revision/Review Articles - List

Every manager must have the ability or skills of identifying business opportunities and providing providing goods and services at profit in the light of the business opportunity.


Identifying and evaluating a business opportunity means demand is to be estimated. Economics subject has its special focus on analysis of consumer demand. Managers have to use the economics theory to come out with demand forecasts for potential businesses and existing businesses. Actually Philip Kotler, the celebrated author of the book Marketing Management, is an economist by education and he said he worked in marketing as marketing is economics.

In the economics subject,  production cost analysis is also undertaken. Ideas like economies of scale, marginal diminishing productivity etc. are important theories in production economics which are to be used by managers.

Economics has subareas which are more focused on specific issues related to businesses. Engineering economic analysis deals with the profitability analysis of income expansion and cost reduction expenditures proposed by engineers in the production systems. It can be used for expenditure or investment proposals made by any body like repairs to house or automobiles etc.  Even investment in  shares and bonds can be analyzed using methods of engineering economic analysis.

In managerial economics, Joel Dean described the application of economic analysis to many managerial decision making like advertising expenditures and pricing decisions when multiple products are there etc.

Industrial economics examines why certain industries have higher profit margins at a point time. Monopoly and Oligopoly may be the reasons for higher profits. Hence creating barriers to entry becomes a competitive activity for firms. But on the other hand, society tries to support more competition.

Managers have to acquire the relevant theories from various economics subjects and be on the lookout for new theories that support their work.

Even accounting tools are used in business conceptualization as proforma income statements, balance sheets and cash flows statements need to be prepared to submit to financial organizations to fund a business.

Economics - Revision Articles - Based on Samuelson's Book - List

Managerial Economics - Review Articles - List

Financial, Cost and Management Accounting - Review Notes List



Second article for revision for the day:
Peter Drucker - Business Organization - Economic Function - Social Responsibility
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2011/11/peter-drucker-business-organization.html

January Month Management Knowledge Revision Plan

MBA Core Management Knowledge - One Year Revision Schedule


Updated  19 January 2018,  22 Jan 2016,  30 Dec 2014

January 4, 2018

The Most Popular Management Articles of 2017






MBA Core Management Knowledge - One Year Revision Schedule and Articles



The Most Popular  Management Articles of 2017 in Various Management Publications



Taylor - Narayana Rao Principles of Industrial Engineering

Presented in 2017 - Original Contribution in Industrial Engineering with Primary Focus on Productivity in Engineering Industry
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By 2020 AI will create more jobs than it eliminates, predicts Gartner
Lindsay James By Lindsay James on 18 December 2017
http://www.technologyrecord.com/Article/by-2020-ai-will-create-more-jobs-than-it-eliminates-predicts-gartner-62404


Harvard Business Review


2017 Best of Harvard Business Review


 "Customer Loyalty Is Overrated,"  A.G. Lafley and Roger L. Martin;
https://hbr.org/2017/01/customer-loyalty-is-overrated

"Noise: How to Overcome the High, Hidden Cost of Inconsistent Decision Making,"  Daniel Kahneman, Andrew M. Rosenfield, Linnea Gandhi, and Tom Blaser;
https://hbr.org/2016/10/noise

"Visualizations That Really Work,"  Scott Berinato;
https://hbr.org/2016/06/visualizations-that-really-work

"Right Tech, Wrong Time,"  Ron Adner and Rahul Kapoor;
https://hbr.org/2016/11/right-tech-wrong-time

"How to Pay for Health Care,"  Michael E. Porter and Robert S. Kaplan;
https://hbr.org/2016/07/how-to-pay-for-health-care

"The Performance Management Revolution,"  Peter Cappelli and Anna Tavis;
https://hbr.org/2016/10/the-performance-management-revolution

"Let Your Workers Rebel,"  Francesca Gino;

"Why Diversity Programs Fail,"  Frank Dobbin and Alexandra Kalev;

"What So Many People Don't Get About the U.S. Working Class,"  Joan C. Williams;

"The Truth About Blockchain,"  Marco Iansiti and Karim R. Lakhani;

"The Edison of Medicine,"  Steven Prokesch, January–February 2017

https://books.google.co.in/books?id=VBZuDgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false

MIT Sloan Management Review


The 20 Most Popular MIT Sloan Management Review Articles of 2017



1. The Jobs That Artificial Intelligence Will Create
A study by Accenture on new categories of jobs that will emerge as AI is deployed.

2. Reshaping Business With Artificial Intelligence
Report from MIT Sloan Management Review and the Boston Consulting Group.


3. Analytics as a Source of Business Innovation
This 2017 MIT Sloan Management Review report on data and analytics.


4. The Smart Way to Respond to Negative Emotions at Work
Author Christine M. Pearson

5. Achieving Digital Maturity
2017 report on digital business by  MIT SMR and Deloitte.



6. The Most Underrated Skill in Management
Nelson P. Repenning, Don Kieffer, and Todd Astor - The discipline of clearly articulating the problem you seek to solve before jumping into action.

7. How Big Data Is Empowering AI and Machine Learning at Scale
Big Data is powerful on its own, as is artificial intelligence. What happens when the two are merged?

8. The End of Corporate Culture as We Know It
MIT SMR editor in chief Paul Michelman

9. Why Design Thinking in Business Needs a Rethink
Authors Martin Kupp, Jamie Anderson, and Jörg Reckhenrich

10. Turning Strategy Into Results
Leaders can translate the complexity of strategy into guidelines that are simple and flexible enough to execute.

11. Your Company Doesn’t Need a Digital Strategy
George Westerman,  MIT: In digital transformation, digital is not the answer. Transformation is.

12. Corporate Sustainability at a Crossroads
MIT Sloan Management Review and the Boston Consulting Group - Companies can develop workable — and profitable — sustainability strategies to reduce their impact on the global environment by incorporating eight key lessons.

13. What to Expect From Artificial Intelligence
Advances in artificial intelligence are likely to change the workplace — and the work of managers.

14. ‘Digital Transformation’ Is a Misnomer
Gerald C. Kane, Pprofessor of information systems at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College -    "
It’s helpful to think of digital transformation as “continual adaptation to a constantly changing environment.”

15. The Five Steps All Leaders Must Take in the Age of Uncertainty
Corporate executives need to become active influencers within broader systems to realize more desired state of affairs in the business environment.

16. Harnessing the Secret Structure of Innovation
Companies can improve their odds of sustained success by taking advantage of information about the unfolding innovation process (Science of Innovation).

17. Five Myths About Digital Transformation
Villanova University professor Stephen J. Andriole, Professor, Villanova University - Grasp the realities of digital transformation — Don't getting seduced by the hype - Realize the myths.

18. 12 Essential Innovation Insights
Dozen of the best insights on innovation.

19. How to Monetize Your Data
Thoughts on  figuring out how to derive a profit from the massive data being collected inside and by others outside.

20. How to Thrive — and Survive — in a World of AI Disruption
MIT Sloan Professor Erik Brynjolfsson - It is world with rapidly changing work - accept it and develop new skills as an organization and also as an individual


https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/the-20-most-popular-mit-sloan-management-review-articles-of-2017/


California Management Review

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California Management Review upload
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKXvPGqxAlIFgkttRSTEQAA


Top YouTube Videos Related to Management 2017



Upgrading management technology | Leerom Segal
320k views in 2017
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Andrew Ng: Artificial Intelligence is the New Electricity
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21EiKfQYZXc&t=112s
259k views


Sri Rama's Life - A Lesson in Inner Management
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxwspcPEi8U
143,350 views



Act Like the Leader You Want to Be
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsZAx20Ui_A
83k views


Just Say "Yes" to Challenges for Success - Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman, Alphabet Inc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bh804pcy5sc
70k views


LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner on Compassionate Management
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7h9esSsOLDE
49k views


Important Management Books of 2017


Competing on Analytics: Updated, with a New Introduction: The New Science of Winning
Thomas Davenport, Jeanne Harris
Harvard Business Press, 29-Aug-2017 - Business & Economics - 320 pages
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=LW9GDgAAQBAJ


December 31, 2017

December - Management Knowledge Revision


December (Business Laws, Negotiation, Taxes and Government Relations)

New

First Week - 1 to 5 December

Business Law - USA
https://www.sba.gov/category/navigation-structure/starting-managing-business/starting-business/business-law-regulations


Advertising and Marketing Law
https://www.sba.gov/starting-business/learn-about-business-laws/advertising-marketing-law

Employment and Labor Law
https://www.sba.gov/starting-business/learn-about-business-laws/employment-labor-law

Finance Law
https://www.sba.gov/starting-business/learn-about-business-laws/finance-law

Online Business Law
https://www.sba.gov/starting-business/learn-about-business-laws/online-business-law

Regulation of Financial Contracts
https://www.sba.gov/starting-business/learn-about-business-laws/regulation-financial-contracts


Business Taxes - USA
https://www.irs.gov/Businesses


Small Business Tax Center
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed

Large Business and International Tax Center
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/large-business-and-international-tax-center

Deducting Business Expenses
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/deducting-business-expenses

Excise Tax
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/excise-tax


Second Week - 8 to 12, December

Negotiation Related Knowledge

Negotiations - Knowledge, Research and Skills
http://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2017/12/negotiations-knowledge-research-and.html


Six Surprising Negotiation Tactics That Get You The Best Deal
http://www.forbes.com/sites/work-in-progress/2013/12/05/six-surprising-negotiation-tactics-that-get-you-the-best-deal/
(Based on Wharton Professor Adam Grant's Book Give and Take

7 Negotiation Techniques Every Small Business Owner Should Know
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/30/negotiating-tips-small-business_n_4058588.html


10 Techniques for Better Negotiation
http://www.startupnation.com/articles/10-techniques-for-better-negotiation/

Archive - Program on Negotiation - Harvard Law School
http://www.pon.harvard.edu/tag/negotiation-techniques/


http://www.pon.harvard.edu/daily/dealmaking-daily/negotiation-skills-and-negotiation-techniques-predicting-negotiator-decisions-and-behavior/

Negotation Techniques - An Introduction
http://web.mit.edu/negotiation/www/NTintro.html


Ten Tips to Convince Buyer to Pay More
http://www.negotiationbootcamp.com/NegotiationArticles/TipsForPriceNegotiation.html

Principled versus Positional Negotiation for Purchasing Professionals
79th Annual International ISM Conference Proceedings - 1994 - Atlanta, GA
https://www.instituteforsupplymanagement.org/pubs/Proceedings/confproceedingsdetail.cfm?ItemNumber=5205&SSO=1


Third and Fourth Weeks are left free as year-end vacation.

Bookmark and Visit on 15 January to start 2018 Revision


Industrial Engineers support Engineers and Managers in Efficiency Improvement of Products, Processes and Systems



One Year MBA Knowledge Revision Plan


January  - February  - March  - April  - May   -   June

July  - August     - September  - October  - November  - December


Old


First Week

Economics of Advertising - Economics for the CEO - Managerial economics

Managerial Economics of Basic Price - Joel Dean


Product-Line Pricing - Managerial Economics

Economics of Price Differentials - Joel Dean


Economics of Capital Budgeting - Joel Dean


Operations Management

Introduction to the Field of Operations Management
Operations Strategy and Competitiveness - Review Notes

Optimizing the Use of Resources with Linear Programming

Operations Management shifted to March

Third and Fourth Weeks are left free as year-end vacation.

One Year MBA Knowledge Revision Plan

January  - February  - March  - April  - May   -   June

July  - August     - September  - October  - November  - December



Updated 8, 6 December  2017, 1 December 2016,  11 December 2015






December 18, 2017

New CEO's Turnaround Effort - Success and Failure




The Transformations That Work—and Why
BCG.com
NOVEMBER 7, 2017
By Hans-Paul Bürkner , Lars Fæste , Jim Hemerling , Yulia Lyusina , and Martin Reeves
https://www.bcg.com/publications/2017/transformations-people-organization-that-work-why.aspx


A New CEO's Turnaround Success Based on Listening to Employees and Customers

A New CEO's Turnaround Project - Important Points

I spent most of my first 90 days out in operations and in the field listening — to my employees,  to customers, to suppliers. Listening, watching, evaluating the situation, the opportunity, the constraints and the possible solutions to decide  the steps were that needed to be taken. The decision making was made into a more decentralized model.

You should not attempt to fix a company without data from the trenches. You have get into your employee’s shoes, and your customer’s shoes. Know what problems are to be solved and then only come with solutions.

People at their core want to be part of something successful. To make them a part of successful venture from now make them believe that they’re part of planning the venture. Make them feel good of their 5, 10, 15 years of experience. Tell them it is worth something. Their opinions were worth something. You give that respect to  an equipment operator, a plant foreman, and plant manager. Make them feel proud of their knowledge and skill.

As a CEO who joined recently, trust them first. Back them in their routine activities and they will trust you and participate in strategy development. Make progress and share the benefits of the progress with all employees.

The new CEO has to harvest the collective wisdom gained over years of experience by large number of employees, and then motivate them through good leadership demonstrated to the next level of managers and asking them to exhibit similar style down the line. A CEO can’t be everywhere. But leadership style, performance culture, and a work environment that was supportive of each other can be everywhere in the organization.

The CEO: Sandbrook of US Concrete

http://www.leadersmag.com/issues/2016.4_Oct/ROB/LEADERS-William-Sandbrook-U.S.-Concrete.html

https://www.dallasnews.com/business/business/2017/06/01/toyotas-hq-one-world-trade-center-union-dallas-common-euless-based-concrete-company

http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/what-leaders-gain-by-listening-closely-to-employees/

http://chiefexecutive.net/bill-sandbrook-shoring-u-s-concrete/

Updated 19 December 2017, 3 July 2017

December 7, 2017

Negotiations - Knowledge, Research and Skills



Negotiation Skills



Negotiation skills are becoming increasingly recognized as important to effective management and personal success.

Research at one time identified some common mistakes being made in negotiations.

1. Negotiating persons tend to be overly affected by the frame, or form of presentation, of information in a negotiation.
2. Even when a course of action is no longer the most reasonable alternative, negotiators tend to nonrationally escalate commitment to a previously selected or advocated course of action.
3. Negotiators tend to assume that their gain must come at the expense of the other party and thereby miss opportunities for mutually beneficial trade-offs  between the parties.
4. Negotiators judgments tend to be anchored on irrelevant information, such as initial offer.
5. Negotiators tend to rely on readily available information.
6. Negotiators tend to fail to consider information that is available by focusing on the opponent's perspective.
7. Negotiators tend to be overconfident concerning the likelihood of attaining outcomes that favor the individual(s) involved.

 Traditionally, negotiators have depended on distributed and positional bargaining. Distributed bargaining assumes a "fixed pie" and focuses on how to get the biggest share, or "slice of the pie" for the benefit of the negotiating party. Positional bargaining approach involved successively taking and then giving up, a sequence of positions. A position involves telling the other side what you want.

Strategies called soft and hard are used in traditional ways of negotiating.  Characteristics of the "hard strategy" include the following: the goal is victory, distrust others, dig into your position, make threats, try to win contest of will, apply pressure.

Soft strategy includes characteristics: The goal is agreement, trust others, change your position easily,  make offers,  try to avoid a contest of will, and yield to pressure.


The traditional approach is now being challenged by more effective alternative negotiation skills.

Whetten and Cameron suggest an approach that takes an "expanding the pie" perspective and advocates finding win-win outcomes. The approach recommends:
1. Establishing superordinate goals.
2. Separating people from the problem
3. Focusing on interests, not positions
4. Inventing options for mutual gain.
5. Using objective criteria.

In terms of negotiation techniques or manoevres the following are identified as in use by negotiators.

 Practical low-risk strategies include flattery, addressing the easy points first, silence, inflated opening position, and "oh, poor me."

High-risk strategies include unexpected temper losses, high-balling, Boulwarism, and waiting until the last moment.

Harvard Negotiation Project came up with principled negotiation approach or negotiation on the merits approach. This is an  integrative approach, which uses a problem-solving, collaborative strategy, and the principled, or negotiation on the merits approach, which emphasizes people, interests, options, and criteria. These negotiation skills  change the game, leading to a win-win, wise agreement.

Along with social, emotional, behavioral, leadership, team, and communication skills, negotiation skills are becoming increasingly recognized as important to effective management.



Principled Negotiation Approach



Positional style of negotiation,

With the positional style of negotiation, each party starts with an extreme (may be unjustified) position. The basis for this approach is the belief that the ultimate solution will be favorable only if the initial offer is extreme and concessions are done. But it is zero-sum game. One party will win and one will lose and in many case of street buying situations, seller comes down drastically.

But deals and settlements in positional negotiations come with a steep non- monetary price. Trust becomes the victim and in the next negotiation also both parties bargain heavily. Thus, the process creates (or perpetuates) an adversarial relationship between the two parties.

Principled negotiation seeks to establish a foundation and climate where parties can be creative in searching for mutually beneficial solutions to a shared problem. This approach preserves, and may even enhance, ongoing relationships.

Four basic elements of principled negotiation were put forth by Fisher and Ury (1991) in their book Getting to Yes (1981).


FOUR PRINCIPLES -  PRINCIPLED NEGOTIATION


People -- Separate the people from the problem.
Interests -- Focus on interests, not positions.
Options -- Generate a variety of possibilities before deciding what to do.
Criteria -- Insist that the result be based on some objective standard.


Four Negotiation Skills For Regular People
https://www.thehedgescompany.com/four-negotiation-skills-regular-people/


Principled versus Positional Negotiation for Purchasing Professionals
79th Annual International ISM Conference Proceedings - 1994 - Atlanta, GA
 https://www.instituteforsupplymanagement.org/pubs/Proceedings/confproceedingsdetail.cfm?ItemNumber=5205&SSO=1



Recent Articles on Negotiations - Quotes

Negotiation Is Changing
Noam Ebner
Journal of Dispute Resolution, Vol. 2017 (1), 99-143.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2915204


Abandon zero-sum games in transactions and deals  

Claim up to 42% more value.
(quote created by NRao)

At MarketWatch Centre for Negotiation, we’ve found that negotiators can claim up to 42% more value in a deal by abandoning zero-sum games and creating a relationship based on trust and collaboration.
Why Negotiators Still Aren't 'Getting To Yes'
Keld Jensen, FEB 5, 2013
https://www.forbes.com/sites/keldjensen/2013/02/05/why-negotiators-still-arent-getting-to-yes/#1b6c1a9f2640


More References on Negotiation

IVY EXEC - Articles on Negotiation
https://www.ivyexec.com/executive-insights/category/advancing/negotiation-skills/


Books on Negotiation Skills


Negotiating at Work: Turn Small Wins Into Big Gains

Deborah M. Kolb, Jessica L. Porter
John Wiley & Sons, 27-Jan-2015 - Business & Economics - 288 pages


Understand the context of negotiations to achieve better results

Negotiation has always been at the heart of solving problems at work.  What has been missed in much of the literature of the past 30 years is that negotiations in organizations always take place within a context—of organizational culture, of prior negotiations, of power relationships—that dictates which issues are negotiable and by whom. When we negotiate for new opportunities or increased flexibility, we never do it in a vacuum. We challenge the status quo and we build out the path for others to negotiate those issues after us. In this way, negotiating for ourselves at work can create small wins that can grow into something bigger, for ourselves and our organizations.

Negotiating at Work offers practical advice for managing your own workplace negotiations: how to get opportunities, promotions, flexibility, buy-in, support, and credit for your work. It does so within the context of organizational dynamics, recognizing that to negotiate with someone who has more power adds a level of complexity.

 Negotiating at Work is rooted in real-life cases of professionals from a wide range of industries and organizations, both national and international.

Strategies to get the other person to the table and engage in creative problem solving, even when they are reluctant to do so
Tips on how to recognize opportunities to negotiate, bolster your confidence prior to the negotiation, turn 'asks' into a negotiation, and advance negotiations that get "stuck"
A rich examination of research on negotiation, conflict management, and gender
By using these strategies, you can negotiate successfully for your job and your career; in a larger field, you can also alter organizational practices and policies that impact others.
Preview
https://books.google.co.in/books?id=F7FYBQAAQBAJ






Training Materials

Advanced Labor Negotiations
US Army, 1985
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x030450211;view=1up;seq=1


Updated 8 December 2017, 5 December 2017

November 30, 2017

Manufacturing Sector - Business and Management Issues and Trends



September 2017

The McKinsey Global Institute finds that the United States could boost annual manufacturing value added by up to $530 billion (20 percent) over current trends by 2025.

By 2025, consumption in emerging markets will hit $30 trillion.

Industry 4.0, is driven by developments in data aquisition, storage and analytics,  machine learning, new forms of human–machine interaction (such as touch interfaces and augmented-reality systems), and the ability to transmit digital instructions to the physical world. In combination, the technologies can run smart, cost-efficient, and automated plants that produce large volumes—or, conversely, plants that turn out highly customized products.

https://www.mckinsey.com/global-themes/americas/making-it-in-america-revitalizing-us-manufacturing

November 28, 2017

Business Model Innovation




Managerial Opportunity Recognition in Business Model Innovation

Marijan Topic
GRIN Verlag, 06-Nov-2017 - Business & Economics - 159 pages


Master's Thesis from the year 2017 Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg


The goal of this Master’s thesis is to examine the relationship between managerial Opportunity Recognition (OR) and business model innovations (BMIs) in established organizations. In order to meet the complexity of the topic, this thesis is focused on factors that hinder or help managers in recognizing business opportunities. Focusing on incumbent firms, this paper conducts further research to identify the main influencing factors, including challenges, vulnerabilities, and obstacles. The thesis is divided into six parts, starting with a brief description of the research topic, including the problem position and objective.

Second, a literature review is conducted to summarize the state of research, including theoretical foundations. The results are then synthesized into a summary

The third part of the thesis consists of expert interviews. Derived from the literature review, a guideline for interviews is developed to treat the research gaps in an appropriate way and to meet the complexity of the task setting. The explorative survey aims to identify the challenges and drivers of managerial OR in BMI and to identify approaches that have not yet been addressed in scientific literature to a significant extent.

The core of the analysis is the splitting of the BM into the elements value proposition, value creation, and value capture. This ensures that all the facets of a company ́s BM are accurately addressed and form the basis for high-quality results.

https://books.google.co.in/books?id=9DI9DwAAQBAJ



40 Principles for Business Model Innovation

The 40 principles for innovation, based on TRIZ adjusted for business problems, is the result of an analysis of close to three million successful inventive solutions from areas such as science, arts, politics.

http://tbmdb.blogspot.in/2009/03/40-principles-for-business-model.html