
Analytics & Strategy
The Best of This Week
How to boost innovation capacity and institutional pride, and addressing tech inequity and the ethics of automation.
How to boost innovation capacity and institutional pride, and addressing tech inequity and the ethics of automation.
External innovation is a way to broaden your portfolio, not a substitute for internal innovation.
CEOs who manage crises using intuition, logic, and emotion are the best role models.
Adjusting business strategies and plotting comebacks in the face of uncertainty.
Amid pandemic-driven market changes, opportunities await organizations that proactively adjust their business strategies.
Columbia’s Rita McGrath discusses how traditional businesses can compete with innovative upstarts.
Disruption detection and delusions, ethical implications of new technologies, and nudge engines.
This special issue looks at what it will take to innovate and compete over the next decade.
Clayton Christensen was more interested in getting to the right answer than in being right.
Think you’re aware of the forces that might disrupt your company? Your lens may be far too narrow.
A new species of disrupter has great products but offers even better experiences.
Today’s direct-to-consumer disrupters, the reality of running an AI business, and managing digital natives.
Disrupters are now going directly to consumers with products that compete head-on with incumbents.
Looking back on disruptive innovation theory and preparing for smarter crowdsourcing.
Solving complex problems with crowdsourcing means tailoring the crowd to the problem’s scope.
In an Q&A with a longtime collaborator, Christensen offered reflections on his influential work.
Christensen’s Theory of Disruptive Innovation offers insights in an age of big data and tech growth.
To innovate and survive, organizations must develop core business skills in their digital talent.
Atlanta is a tech hub; more reasons women should be on corporate boards; updates from Davos 2020.
Slack makes us miserable, automated vehicles’ future, and a CEO letter confronts climate change.