Developing Strategy
Is It Time to Hire a Chief Legal Strategist?
Here’s a strategic angle that most businesses don’t think about: how they can use the law to secure strategic business goals.
Here’s a strategic angle that most businesses don’t think about: how they can use the law to secure strategic business goals.
Asking the right questions can help you broaden your perspective — and make smarter decisions.
Companies need to cultivate resilience to unexpected disruptions to complex supply chains.
New strategies are helping companies embrace “collaborative consumption” and the “sharing economy.”
In a video panel the authors of Leading Digital discuss companies using digital for advantage.
New research looks at the strategies executives use in capturing new growth opportunities.
Businesses have the potential to be rule makers as well as players in establishing environmental regulations.
Visits from corporate headquarters to operations in markets such as China are often seen as unproductive.
As part of its sustainability strategy, organic yogurt company Stonyfield has made a mission of total transparency in its sourcing.
How do you develop strategy in a business environment exemplified by rapid change and uncertainty about the future?
In turbulent markets, managers can build momentum for innovative strategies by rethinking the past, reconsidering present concerns – and reimagining the future.
How can managers best meet the challenge of capturing new growth opportunities?
Strategic thinking by corporate boards is more important than ever for business survival.
Deal markets can be “hot” or “cold,” and that can bias executives’ evaluations of potential acquisitions.
Companies can adopt one of five legal strategies: avoidance, compliance, prevention, value or transformation.
MIT Sloan faculty discuss their research on the growth opportunities in Latin America and China.
When using analytics becomes a routine practice, four key changes will follow.
Unconventional approaches to innovation are speeding up new product development, making R&D faster and cheaper.
An unexpected partnership emerged when Asia Pulp negotiated with Greenpeace.
The process of bringing assembly work back to U.S. factories from abroad is more challenging than the economics would predict.