Intellectual Capital/Stewart 113-114
114 Another compelling reason to make a formal effort to map corporate brainpower: coping with growth and staff turnover.
...so important to capture the knowledge.
Some of my notes from some of the books I'm reading.
114 Another compelling reason to make a formal effort to map corporate brainpower: coping with growth and staff turnover.
15. My concern is creating an environment where good people want to hang around.
81 Scott Paper's and Kimberly-Clark's differing reactions to P&G bring us to a vital point. In confronting the brutal facts, the gtg companies left themselves stronger and more resilient, not weaker and more dispirited. There is a sense of exhilaration that comes in facing head-on the hard truths and saying, "We will never give up. We will never capitulate. It might take a long time, but we will find a way to prevail.
108 Structural capital...it is knowledge that doesn't go home at night.
10 Simple. It's the very essence of humanness, of connecting with the customer--and a strong indicator of superior service and quality.
79 Indeed, we found no evidence that the gtg companies had more or better information than the comparison companies. None. Both sets of companies had virtually identical access to good information. The key, then, lies not in better information, but in turning information into information that cannot be ignored.
147 Investors are looking for people who can implement ideas, not simply come up with them.
106 The gainsharing bonus thus becomes, in effect, a dividend paid to employees for investing human capital. Peter Drucker says, that "the true investment in the knowledge society is not in machines and tools but in the knowledge of the knowledge workers need them.
6 ...people nurturing has two good sides, too -- one for the nurtured and another for the nurturer. The phone call, the small courtesy, the warm words, are all modest acts of engagement that make customers feel good.
Lou Holtz, "It's not my job to motivate players. They bring extraordinary motivation to our program. It's my job not to de-motivate them."
TOM PETERS' TRUTHS
Unintended consequences outnumber intended consequences.
Fiction beats nonfiction.
Success begets failure. IF you (or your company) luck out and find something that works, you're in trouble. You'll most likely try to make history repeat itself, which can hardly ever be made to happen. (The times that it does happen are when you most want it not to.)Circumstances change, and the strengths that led to your first success often become weaknesses.
Democracy and markets are untidy, but effective.
Vermont farmers have a lot to teach us.
Lighten up.
Smile if it kills you.
Each day is a miracle
Reject simple explanations.
The only security we have is in our ability to fly by the seat of our pants. Brad Blanton/Radical Honesty.
77 Like Nucor, all the gtg companies had a penchant for intense dialogue. Phrases like "loud debate," heated discussions,"and "healthy conflict" peppered the articles and interview transcripts from all the companies. They didn't use discussion as a sham process to let people "have their say" so that they could "buy in" to a predetermined decision. The process was more like a heated scientific debate, with people engaged in a search for the best answers.
145 When should an entrepreneur reverse a negative decision by arguing?...I’ve never seen an entrepreneur reverse a negative decision by arguing.
105 For pure information age companies, the principal barrier to entry is the ability to concentrate intellectual property.
4 70% of lost customers hit the road not because of price or quality issues but because they didn't like the human side of doing business with the prior provider of the product or service.
75 Indeed, Wurtzel/Circuit City stands as one of the few CEOs in a large corporation who put more questions to his board members than they put to him.
144 Is it better to have fewer, bigger investors or numerous, smaller investments? …
103 Human capital represents a major portion of the total value of some companies.
1 IBM founder Tomas Watson...If you want to achieve excellence, he said, you get there today. As of this second, quite doing less-than-excellent work.