This document discusses questions around the changing nature of value creation in global enterprises, including what has happened to traditional levers of value creation, what defines the next generation, whether value will be created or combatted, whether the focus will be today or tomorrow, how foreign-owned businesses will evolve, whether assets will be owned or harnessed, the future of product economies, and implications for human capital management.
#3: Labour, Capital, Land, Technology, Knowledge all will become commoditiesKey to value creationHarnessing humans togetherBringing inspired souls together to create inspirationManaging the customer interface
#4: Continuum from generation to generationChangeMorphingBreakdown of business modelsRebuilding the old onePaceElemental half life
#5: No national boundariesMulticultural, multidimensionalEconomics, not politics, is driving agendas
#6: Sustainable and genuine value creationBlue Ocean or Red Ocean Concept of net value creation triple bottom lineThe approach of conscious capitalismNet value
#7: The need to continuously morph the pace of change faster than ever beforeThe need to manage tension between today and tomorrowIssues of success being its own enemyCore competencies becoming core rigiditiesManagement of Innovation schemesThe ambidextrous organisation Learning agility Implementation agility Implementation scienceIncremental changes v/s game changersParadox success in existing business creates barriers to the development of new businessThe need to move from todays strengths.
#8: The psychology itself a barrierFamily governance v/s corporate governanceThe right to govern
#9: Definition of an assetThe concept of travelling lightShare of pie v/s size of pieThe spirit of abundance
#10: Products are commoditiesExperiences can be created anewe.g. Apple, Airtel, Maruti
#11: Alignment of valuesThe spirit of abundanceManagement of multiple stakeholdersComfort with ambiguity and changeSchizophrenic about today and tomorrowPrimarily focused on implementation time to market