Intellectual Capital: The new wealth of organizationCrown, 2010. szept. 22. - 320 oldal Visionary in scope, Intellectual Capital is the first book that shows how to turn the untapped knowledge of an organization into its greatest competitive weapon. Thomas A. Stewart demonstrates how knowledge--not natural resources, machinery, or financial capital--has become the most important factor in economic life. Through practical advice, stories, and case histories, Stewart reveals how organizations and individuals can create and use the knowledge assets they need. Dazzling in its ability to make conceptual sense of the economic revolution we are living through, this ingenious book cuts through the vague rhetoric of "paradigm shifts" to show how the Information Age economy really works. Intellectual Capital should be read as if the futures of your company and your career depend on it. They do. |
Részletek a könyvből
6 - 10 találat összesen 42 találatból.
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... shares of Microsoft is not buying assets in any traditional sense; for that matter, he is not purchasing much in the way of assets if he buys IBM or Merck or General Electric. A dollar invested in a corporation buys something different ...
... shares of Microsoft is not buying assets in any traditional sense; for that matter, he is not purchasing much in the way of assets if he buys IBM or Merck or General Electric. A dollar invested in a corporation buys something different ...
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... share of the American labor force whose jobs primarily involve working with things (farmworkers, operators and laborers, craftspeople) or delivering nonprofessional services (hotel and restaurant workers, distribution workers, retail ...
... share of the American labor force whose jobs primarily involve working with things (farmworkers, operators and laborers, craftspeople) or delivering nonprofessional services (hotel and restaurant workers, distribution workers, retail ...
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... SHARE OF THE LABOR FORCE . Source: Stephen R. Barley According to Kiichi Mochizuki, a former executive at a Japanese steel company who heads the Pacific Institute, a New York City research group: “These days, with computerized factories ...
... SHARE OF THE LABOR FORCE . Source: Stephen R. Barley According to Kiichi Mochizuki, a former executive at a Japanese steel company who heads the Pacific Institute, a New York City research group: “These days, with computerized factories ...
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... share, and so on. Management-by-the-numbers reached an epitome—or a nadir—in Harold Geneen's notorious operations reviews at ITT in the 1960s and 1970s, where trembling business-unit managers of the far-flung conglomerate appeared to be ...
... share, and so on. Management-by-the-numbers reached an epitome—or a nadir—in Harold Geneen's notorious operations reviews at ITT in the 1960s and 1970s, where trembling business-unit managers of the far-flung conglomerate appeared to be ...
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... share of corporate value-added, the rise of the knowledge worker—all these work together, each simultaneously chicken and egg, horse and cart, cause and effect, to force new kinds of organizational design and new managerial methods and ...
... share of corporate value-added, the rise of the knowledge worker—all these work together, each simultaneously chicken and egg, horse and cart, cause and effect, to force new kinds of organizational design and new managerial methods and ...
Tartalomjegyzék
1 | |
3 | |
18 | |
The Knowledge Worker | 37 |
Content | 53 |
The Hidden Gold | 55 |
The Treasure Map | 65 |
Human Capital | 79 |
Customer Capital Information Wars and Alliances | 142 |
Connection | 167 |
The New Economics of Information | 169 |
The Network Organization | 181 |
Your Career in the Information Age | 199 |
Afterword | 219 |
Tools for Measuring and Managing Intellectual Capital | 223 |
Notes | 249 |
Structural Capital I Knowledge Management | 107 |
Structural Capital II The Danger of Overinvesting in Knowledge | 128 |
Index | 265 |
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Intellectual Capital: The New Wealth of Organizations Thomas A. Stewart Nincs elérhető előnézet - 1997 |
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
accounting airline bank become billion boss brainpower career CHAPTER communities of practice company's competitors consultant corporate cost create customer capital databases economic economist electronic employees Erik Brynjolfsson example expertise factory firm Fortune Harvard Business School human capital ideas important industry Information Age information technology intangible assets Intangible Economy intel intellectual assets intellectual capital Interview inventory investment Judy Lewent knowl knowledge assets knowledge management knowledge workers labor less leverage look Lotus Notes machines manufacturing measure ment Merck MicroAge Microsoft organization organizational outsource pany percent physical profit project manager reengineering Saint-Onge Says sell share skills someone spending Stewart strategy structural capital stuff suppliers tacit knowledge talent tangible There's tion U.S. Department valuable what's worth York