Remove 2004 Remove Change Remove Government Remove Marketing
article thumbnail

How four market-creating innovations are improving education and employment in Brazil

Christensen Institute

In our recently published paper titled Leveraging Market-Creating Innovations to Solve Brazil’s Education Paradox , we describe how Brazil currently spends more money on education than its Latin American peers, however much of the outcome of its education system is subpar to theirs in comparison. Thankfully there is hope. The impact.

article thumbnail

Big Tech and Media- The Future?

IdeaSpies

It’s the Big Tech playbook: Bank on Governments being too soft and courts too slow. Social When Facebook launched in 2004, it friended news media promising them access to youth. It’s a classic market failure. News media’s 20 years of failure can’t end unless change starts. That collaboration was a lie too.

Report 108
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

A brief history of work, innovation and skills in the UK

Wazoku

The need for people and organisations to innovate has always been there but what’s much harder to comprehend, and therefore navigate, is the rapid pace of change we’re experiencing, on a scale we’ve never seen before. Promoting change of any kind was seen as a threat to the established order. A new era of work and technological change.

article thumbnail

On the Origin of Companies

David Marks

Neither is it governed by chance alone. Similarly to the natural world, weaker and ill-suited companies will prosper during good times, roaming the markets, making profits and gathering fat. They differ in their culture, openness to change and new ideas. They innovate. And most importantly by strategy.

Company 40
article thumbnail

On the Origin of Companies

David Marks

Neither is it governed by chance alone. Similarly to the natural world, weaker and ill-suited companies will prosper during good times, roaming the markets, making profits and gathering fat. They differ in their culture, openness to change and new ideas. They innovate. And most importantly by strategy.

Company 40
article thumbnail

Great to Good Innovation

IdeaSpies

did a follow-on study that found 32 of the 50 companies described in these books to only matched or underperformed the market over their subsequent 15-to-20-year period. Jack Ma (2000), Jeff Bezos (2003), Mark Zuckerberg (2004), Reed Hastings (2007), Brian Chesky (2008), Travis Kalanick (2009), Anthony Tan (2012). Now, how about these?

article thumbnail

Great to Good Innovation

IdeaSpies

did a follow-on study that found 32 of the 50 companies described in these books to only matched or underperformed the market over their subsequent 15-to-20-year period. Jack Ma (2000), Jeff Bezos (2003), Mark Zuckerberg (2004), Reed Hastings (2007), Brian Chesky (2008), Travis Kalanick (2009), Anthony Tan (2012). Now, how about these?