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Hardcover Heads Up: How to Anticipate Business Surprises and Seize Opportunities First Book

ISBN: 1591392993

ISBN13: 9781591392996

Heads Up: How to Anticipate Business Surprises and Seize Opportunities First

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Offers a set of metrics for identifying, analyzing, and responding to the right information at the right time - helping companies to avoid disasters and seize opportunities. This work outlines a four-step approach managers can use to identify which pieces of information merit real-time delivery, and as importantly, which do not.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A highly recommended and practical guide

Written by the group vice-president of Gartner, Inc., a research and advisory firm, Heads Up: How To Anticipae Business Surprises And Seize Opportunities First is a no-nonsense advice guide to business managers everywhere. Emphasizing that the key is being keenly aware of what is going on in the present day, and that business disasters seldom come without any kind of warning, Heads Up walks the reader through a practical methodology to paying attention of the circumstances around oneself and navigating the choppy and changeable seas of opportunity, risk, and surprise, suspected, or surmounted events. Heads Up is a highly recommended and practical guide to raising entrepreneurial and corporate awareness.

Transform Business Surprises into Opportunities

Business "surprises" occur with an alarming frequency. It is an understatement to say they exact a considerable toll on the organization.According to Kenneth G. McGee, even the worst catastrophes rarely happen without warning. The author is a group vice president and research fellow at Gartner, Inc., a consultancy that specializes in information technology. His book, Heads Up, is about predicting the present. Managers need to understand what is happening now and how these current events will impact future success. This involves extracting raw empirical information, analyzing it and determining its meaning and implications. So what is new, you ask? McGee answers managers do not need all the data to understand the present. Only enough to answer the question, "Where are we right now in meeting our corporate goals?"To an effective executive, this current information always reveals opportunities to improve results. There is a tendency to confuse real-time information with real-time response. In the perfect situation, the following processes happen in the background between the time when an event happens and that event's impact is felt.1. Information related to the event is monitored.2. A change in the information is captured.3. The information is analyzed.4. The information is reported.5. A response is initiated.No manager can afford to monitor all his information sources. To determine which sources to monitor, information should be filtered using the following Identification Model:1. List goals for the planning period.2. Prioritize them.3. Evaluate them.4. List causal events.5. Prioritize the causal events.6. Evaluate whether the real-time information will enable the executive to respond effectively.Each candidate generated by the Identification Model is subjected to the Justification Model:1. Does the goal the information further the corporate vision and mission?2. Does the goal meet current corporate priorities?3. Is the information material to the goal?4. What is the goal's corporate impact?McGee's book goes beyond the usual real-time hype. It will help executives anticipate events and changes. The result: potential disasters will be transformed into opportunities.

new thinking on real time

Most of what I read about real-time business falls squarely in the internet era of overblown hype and ridiculous propositions. This book, along with a few stories I've seen in The Economist, offers realistic perspectives on what real-time enterprise really is and how it can realistically help. In short, the author says that its not about reacting faster per se, but about getting information in real time so you know when to react.Also in the books favor are two items: 1) lots of case studies of both failure and success due to real-time information or its lack, 2) models/methodologies that one can actually see using in a business context unlike what you so often see. The models are useful to the average manager not just to the CEO or the chairman of the board.So all in all a very useful and helpful book for understanding the value of real-time information

worth reading

What I was most impressed with about this book is that the author doesn't just preach the glories of real-time. He actually talks about what information shouldn't be real-time. In fact he says that only 5% of corporate information should be real time.Just for that its worth reading.
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