Competing against time : how time-based competition is reshaping global markets / George Stalk, Jr. and Thomas M. Hout
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Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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LRC - Annex | National University - Manila | Gen. Ed. - CBA | General Circulation | GC HD 69 .T54 .S73 1990 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000016790 |
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GC HD 69.P76 .G37 2012 Fundamentals of technology project management / | GC HD 69 .P76 2011 Project management in practice / | GC HD 69.T54 .H15 2005 Managing time / | GC HD 69 .T54 .S73 1990 Competing against time : how time-based competition is reshaping global markets / | GC HD 6971 .N49 2011 Organizational behavior : human behavior at work | GC HD 70.J5 .C49 1995 Reengineering management : the mandate for new leadership / | GC HD 70 .M26 2004 Management cases for business managers and trainers / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. The Dawn of a New Competitive Age 1 -- 2. Time and Business 39 -- 3. Time and Customers 83 -- 4. Time and Innovation 107 -- 5. Time and Money 149 -- 6. Redesigning the Organization for Time 169 -- 7. Becoming a Time-based Organization 197 -- 8. Using Time to Help Your Customers and Suppliers Compete 231 -- 9. Time-based Strategy 253.
Today, time is the cutting edge. In fact, as a strategic weapon, contend George Stalk, Jr., and Thomas M. Hout, time is the equivalent of money, productivity, quality, even innovation. In this path-breaking book based upon ten years of research, the authors argue that the ways leading companies manage time—in production, in new product development, and in sales and distribution—represent the most powerful new sources of competitive advantage.
With many detailed examples from companies that have put time-based strategies in place, such as Federal Express, Ford, Milliken, Honda, Deere, Toyota, Sun Microsystems, Wal-Mart, Citicorp, Harley-Davidson, and Mitsubishi, the authors describe exactly how reducing elapsed time can make the critical difference between success and failure. Give customers what they want when they want it, or the competition will. Time-based companies are offering greater varieties of products and services, at lower costs, and with quicker delivery times than their more pedestrian competitors. Moreover, the authors show that by refocusing their organizations on responsiveness, companies are discovering that long-held assumptions about the behavior of costs and customers are not true: Costs do not increase when lead times are reduced; they decline. Costs do not increase with greater investment in quality; they decrease. Costs do not go up when product variety is increased and response time is decreased; they go down. And contrary to a commonly held belief that customer demand would be only marginally improved by expanded product choice and better responsiveness, the authors show that the actual results have been an explosion in the demand for the product or service of a time-sensitive competitor, in most cases catapulting it into the most profitable segments of its markets.
With persuasive evidence, Stalk and Hout document that time consumption, like cost, is quantifiable and therefore manageable. Today's new-generation companies recognize time as the fourth dimension of competitiveness and, as a result, operate with flexible manufacturing and rapid-response systems, and place extraordinary emphasis on R&D and innovation. Factories are close to the customers they serve. Organizations are structured to produce fast responses rather than low costs and control. Companies concentrate on reducing if not eliminating delays and using their response advantage to attract the most profitable customers.
Stalk and Hout conclude that virtually all businesses can use time as a competitive weapon. In industry after industry, they illustrate the processes involved in becoming a time-based competitor and the ways managers can open and sustain a significant advantage over the competition--Amazon
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