Synopses & Reviews
In this dynamic book, based on the most effective strategies of IBM and other market leaders, managers will learn to successfully transform their organizations into a business prepared to compete in a networked age.
Mainframes, client servers, PCs, networks, e-business, the Internet, databases, technical management--indeed, in the brave new business world facing today's firms only one thing is certain: change. And when looking for a model for corporate change, one should look no further than IBM. In this decade, IBM has gone from a company with less than $60 billion in unprofitable revenue to a highly profitable $85 billion-plus enterprise. In a company whose major source of revenue was once hardware, services now account for more than a third of its revenue. IBM Global Services, only seven years old and $25 billion strong, draws most of its revenue from helping businesses to do successfully what IBM has done: transform themselves. In five down-to-earth sections, the authors share their vast experience, apply case studies, chart trends and describe in-depth the practices that allowed IBM to transform itself, and to show the way for other firms. The result is an essential handbook for anyone charged with leading their firm in an economy that is global, increasingly reliant on information systems, and teeming with rapidly emerging markets--and competitors.
Written by a staff of experts and renowned business thinkers, Into the Networked Age is today's ultimate guide for success in tomorrow's business world.
Review
"A team of authors from IBM Global Services present advice on the management strategies that firms need to stay competitive in a rapidly changing technological world. The emphasis is on rapid and continuous structural transformation in response to changing needs and demands. Case studies are applied to such concerns as the customer base, knowledge management, and leveraging technology."--SciTech Book News
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-223) and index.
About the Author
James W. Cortada is the author of nearly two dozen books on information technology, business transformation, and knowledge management.
Thomas S. Hargraves is a nationally recognized expert on process management.
Ed Wakin is a professor of journalism and a columnist for
Beyond Computing.
Table of Contents
The challenge of change, the response of transformation -- How the rules of the game are changing -- Making customers into partners -- Managing knowledge: issues and implications -- How to manage knowledge -- The leveraging of knowledge -- The "X" factor in transformation -- Process management in action -- Working partners: strategy and technology -- Technologies for today and tomorrow -- Leading the way.