Riassunto:
See coverage in: Fortune, Inc., Forbes, USA Today, The Business Journals, CFO.com, Vox, Investors' Business Daily, Bulldog Reporter. It Takes BOTH Creativity & Discipline to Generate Innovation Value! As markets grow increasingly unpredictable and value propositions need to evolve, innovation isn’t just a buzzword with a hashtag; it’s a lifeline for any business that wants to sustain its value. But business leaders face a challenge: Innovation as a concept can seem amorphous. How should we define innovation at our organization? How do we go about implementing innovation processes and channels? Can innovation value and progress be measured? In Advancing Innovation, Patrick Stroh, CMA, offers a solution that sits right at the crossroads between the dreamer and the doer. The book inspires organizations to use best practices while considering thoughtful customizations for success. Advancing Innovation also gives readers specific tools and guidance to execute, measure, and optimize for the most impact. The result is innovation governance—a Yin and Yang combination that fuses ideation and creativity with execution and discipline to drive value. Most important, as the book reveals, this framework can be measured by Stroh’s unique Innovation Value Score (IVS). IVS uses a balanced scorecard model but with a focus on innovation value. The metrics and functionality of this model hinge on and morph with an organization’s “strategy archetype” (how it goes to market with its value proposition). Those results can then be used for competitive benchmarking and goal-setting. With an engaging, first-hand narrative, Stroh’s book invites readers to discover how managing and measuring innovation opens the door to greater and sustainable organizational value.
Informazioni sull?autore:
<p>The <b>American Institute of CPAs (AICPA)</b> is the world’s largest member association representing the CPA profession, with more than 429,000 members in the United States and worldwide, and a history of serving the public interest since 1887. AICPA members represent many areas of practice, including business and industry, public practice, government, education, and consulting. The AICPA sets ethical standards for its members and U.S. auditing standards for private companies, nonprofit organizations, federal, state and local governments. It develops and grades the Uniform CPA examination, offers specialized credentials, builds the pipeline of future talent and drives professional competency development to advance the vitality, relevance and quality of the procession.</p>
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