Publisher: Prentice Hall, 2005, 292 pages
ISBN: 0-273-69346-8
Keywords: Strategy
Strategy can be awfully boring. The consultants can be straigther than their charts, the planners more predictable than their processes. Everybody is so serious.
If that gets us better strategies, fine. But it doesn't; we get worse ones – predictable, generic, dull. Strategy doesn't only have to position; it also has to inspire. So an uninspiring strategy is really no strategy at all.
The most interesting and most successful companies we know are not boring. They have novel, creative, inspiring, sometimes even playful strategies. By taking the whole strategy business less seriously, they end up with more serious results – and have some fun into the bargain.
Strategy Bites Back invites you to encounter an unlikely set of voices with something sharp to say about strategy – from Mozart to Coco Chanel's “little black dress”. These perspectives will provide you with new and dramatically different angles from which to attack the world of strategy.
This book is for everyone involved with strategy – manager, CEO, consultant, professor, student – who wants to see strategy more broadly, more deeply and more playfully.
If we bring a little imagination back into the making of strategy, our strategies can take us to a different place. So here's to more playful and incisive strategies. It's time for strategy to bite back.
This is pure genius at work. I bow my head in awe. This is not recommended reading, this is the kind of book you MUST read if you're into strategy. Cut down on Porter, Kay, Drucker, etc., and read this instead! After reading this, you can re-visit the old schools and see the world in a different light. In short, I am ecstatic. You'll pry this book from my dead hands (if you can get it away from me even then…).
Read it, or you'll miss a very funny book (if you don't laugh out load a number of times, you lack all sense of humour) as well as a very thought-provoking book with a very important message, which even manages to make strategy fun (you'll understand more after having read the book). Together with Strategy Safari (by the same authors) and Johnson & Scholes books, this should be enough to get anyone to understand and work with strategy.
This has to be one of this decades most important/influential books, so I'll recommend it warmly.
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