Dave Ulrich
Professor of Business Administration AREA OF EXPERTISE:
Strategy execution, performance management of workforce metrics and HR
strategy in organizations SNAPSHOT:
Dave studies how leaders build organization capabilities of speed,
learning, collaboration, talent, and leadership through HR. He has helped
shape the HR agenda worldwide and is recognized as a thought leader in HR,
leadership, culture, change, and organization design. NEW! HR as a
Competitive Advantage
This session will identify the ways in which companies build
competitive advantage through how they manage people. It will show that HR
adds value to employees, line managers, customers, and investors and will
offer specific tools to create this value. We will review 14 criteria by
which to evaluate and improve HR and participants will leave with an
action plan for making their HR functions more valuable. NEW!
Organization as a Competitive Advantage
This session works on two simple premises. First competitiveness is not
strategy, but strategy * organization. It is critical to have both a
strategy for where we are going and an organization for how we get there.
Second, organization is not structure, but capability. Thinking about an
organization as a set of capabilities, forces managers to concentrate on
how to define the identity of their organization through the eyes of
customers and investors. We will do a capability audit then look at
specific tools for capabilities of: speed, talent, learning,
collaboration, accountability, culture, customer service, and efficiency. |
Jeff DeGraff
Clinical Associate Professor of Management Education
Managing Director, Creativity at Work
AREA OF EXPERTISE:
Managing creativity, change, innovation strategy and practices, and
organizational competencies.
SNAPSHOT:
Jeff is co-author of the book Creativity at Work: Developing the Right
Practices to Make Innovation Happen, and is an internationally acclaimed
consultant to hundreds of the world's most prominent firms. He has developed a
broad array of widely used change and innovation methodologies and tools, runs a
leading innovation center, Innovatrium, and serves as an advisor to think tanks
and governments. In collaboration with Bob Quinn, Kim Cameron and Anjan Thakor,
Jeff created the Competing Values Framework, an integrated method for
stimulating, predicting, managing and harvesting winning investments.
Creativity at Work: Developing the Right Practices to Make Innovation Happen
A breakthrough idea isn't valuable if you can't implement it. In this highly
interactive workshop you will discover how to make innovation happen where you
work. First, learn how to quickly assess what creativity competencies and
culture you will need to create the type of value you desire. Next, learn to
jumpstart a team and a creative project. Finally, learn to overcome
organizational resistance to your project. Bring a challenge or an opportunity;
bring a friend. Come ready to lower your guard and have some fun!
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Kim Cameron
Professor of Management and Organization
AREA OF EXPERTISE:
Kim is actively engaged in developing a new field in organizational studies
entitled Positive Organizational Scholarship--the examination of extraordinarily
positive dynamics in organizations and the factors that unleash the highest in
human potential.
SNAPSHOT:
Kim's past research was on organizational effectiveness, downsizing,
corporate quality culture and the development of leadership excellence. He has
been published in more than 80 articles and seven books, including Coffin
Nails and Corporate Strategies, Diagnosing and Changing Organizational Culture,
Organizational Decline, Organizational Effectiveness, Paradox and Transformation
and, recently, Positive Organizational Scholarship.
Transformational Leadership and Change
Transformation has become a bit of a fad, with multiple approaches and
prescriptions being common. This presentation identifies a tried and true method
for dramatic, transformational change in organizations. Practical tools,
techniques and evidence are provided, along with in-depth analyses of some
highly successful organizational transformations in organizations. Participants
leave with a method for leading transformational change in their own
organizations.
Enabling Virtuousness in Organizations
Organizational virtuousness has been found to predict the extent to which
organizations recover from downsizing, achieve profitability and productivity,
and maintain customer and employee loyalty. But the term virtuousness is usually
associated with philosophy, religion or dogmatism, rather than business success.
This presentation defines virtuousness, how it can be enabled, what its effects
are and why a manager or leader should pay attention to it. Practical hints for
fostering and enabling organizational virtuousness are provided.
Creating Spectacular Performance at Work: The Role of Positivity
In this presentation, Kim will identify and discuss the proven principles
that create levels of performance that exceed most established standards.
Research results and examples of spectacular organizational performance are
highlighted. Evidence is presented for how and why a positive approach to
improvement works, leaving participants with practical tools and guidelines for
implementing spectacular performance in their own organizations.
Diagnosing and Changing Organizational Culture
Culture is frequently the single most important factor that inhibits
successful change in organizations--whether mergers and acquisitions, efficiency
improvements or transformations. Culture, however, is an amorphous concept that
is difficult to identify and define. This presentation provides a clear and
measurable way to identify organizational culture and a proven method for how to
initiate culture change. Practical tools and methods are supplemented with
evidence from research and successful organizational culture changes. |
Venkat Ramaswamy
Michael R. and Mary Kay Hallman Fellow of Electronic Business Professor of
Marketing
AREA OF EXPERTISE: Customer experiences, innovation, communities,
networks, technology and strategy.
SNAPSHOT: Venkat's current research focuses on building
infrastructure for consumer-company interactions, technology as enabling
experiences, word-of-mouth in consumer communities, experience innovation
and exploring new frontiers in co-creation of value. He has co-authored
several articles in the Harvard Business Review, Sloan Management
Review, Strategy and Business, Information Week, Optimize and other
publications. Venkat is co-author (with C. K. Prahalad) of the book The
Future of Competition: Co-creating Unique Value with Customers
(Harvard Business School Press, 2004).
Strategy: Building New Strategic Capital
The goal of strategy is to connect resources with opportunities. The
competitive space has changed dramatically due to discontinuities such as
technology/industry convergence, deregulation/privatization, globalization, the
Internet, new information and communication technologies, and big emerging
sources of both talent and markets. If companies can escape the traditional
firm-centric dominant logic of business and product-centered thinking, they can
see a whole new world of opportunities with the new "co-creation" frame of
reference and the lenses of "customer experiences." They also can leverage an
enhanced resource space that includes the competence of customer communities and
competencies of other firms. We will discuss how firms can connect the new
resource space with the new opportunity space to build new strategic capital.
Value Creation: The New Paradigm of Co-Creation
Customers have greater product variety than ever before, yet they are less
satisfied. Managers have more strategic options, yet they deliver less value.
These paradoxes suggest value must be jointly created by the consumer and the
company. During this presentation, we will discuss the new paradigm of
co-creation of value: what it is, why now, its implications for companies and
how to get there.
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