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The Leader's Calendar
Porter, Michael E.; Nohria, Nitin; Gentile, Tom; McGinn, Daniel; Higgins, SarahArticle HBS-R1804B-EChief executives have tremendous resources at their disposal, but they face an acute scarcity in one critical area: time. This package examines the unique challenges CEOs face in deciding how to allocate it. In "How CEOs Manage Time," Harvard Business School's Porter and Nohria describe an in-depth 12-year study in which they tracked what 27 large-company CEOs did every hour for 13 weeks, and then interviewed them--and hundreds of other CEOs--abo...Starting at €8.20
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Cracking the Code of Change (Spanish version)
Beer, Michael; Nohria, NitinArticle HBS-R00301Leadership and People Managementthe goal is to build and strengthen corporate culture. Most companies focus purely on one theory or the other, or haphazardly use a mix of both, the authors say. Combining E and O is directionally correct, they contend, but it requires a careful, conscious integration plan. Beer and Nohria present the examples of two companies, Scott Paper and Champion International, that used a purely E or purely O strategy to create change--and met with limite...Starting at €8.20
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What Really Works (Spanish version)
Nohria, Nitin; Joyce, William; Roberson, BruceArticle HBS-R0307CStrategytalent, leadership, innovation, and mergers and partnerships. A company that consistently follows this 4+2 formula has a better than 90% chance of sustaining superior performance, according to the authors.Starting at €8.20
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Are Leaders Portable? (Spanish version)
Groysberg, Boris; McLean, Andrew N.; Nohria, NitinArticle HBS-R0605ELeadership and People Managementgeneral management, which is readily transferable, and company specific, which is not. In fact, they argue, other types of management capabilities can contribute significantly to performance, and company-specific skills can be an asset in a new job.Starting at €8.20
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Wealth and Jobs: The Broken Link
Nohria, NitinArticle HBS-F1011E-EThe relationship between value creation and job creation is more tenuous now than it has been for a century. Revenues report that the economy is doing well, but unemployment numbers remain high. Nitin Nohria, dean of Harvard Business School, contends that this fundamental change is a symptom of a deeper structural issue.Starting at €8.20
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Celebrate Innovation, No Matter Where It Occurs
Nohria, NitinArticle HBS-F1204E-EStrategyInnovation capabilities have long been central to U.S. competitive advantage, but the rate of innovative activity is increasing sharply in other countries. Some people see this as the greatest threat to America's economic leadership. The author is unconvinced.Starting at €8.20
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What Makes Analysts Say "Buy"
Groysberg, Boris; Healy, Paul M.; Nohria, Nitin; Serafeim, GeorgeArticle HBS-F1211B-EA large global study examines the factors that stock analysts consider most important when issuing buy, hold, or sell recommendations. The considerations that are deemed significant vary widely from region to region.Starting at €8.20
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Roaring Out of Recession
Gulati, Ranjay; Nohria, Nitin; Wohlgezogen, FranzArticle HBS-R1003C-EStrategyWhat strategies can companies use to both survive a recession and thrive when it ends? The authors studied the strategy selection and corporate performance of 4,700 public companies during the past three global recessions: 1980 to 1982, 1990 to 1991, and 2000 to 2002. They found that of companies that survive a recession, about 80% take more than three years to regain their prerecession growth rates for sales and profits. Just 9% of them flourish...Starting at €8.20
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What Business Schools Can Learn from the Medical Profession
Nohria, NitinArticle HBS-F1201E-EThe clinical experience gained by fledgling doctors is an ideal example of how professional schools address the "knowing-doing gap." Harvard Business School is sending its entire first-year class abroad to developing markets to gain a similar kind of real-world experience.Starting at €8.20