Wolverine Books
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » General » The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation  
Categories
Books
DVDs
Music
Magazines
VHS
Food
Jewelry
Apparel
Sporting Goods
Outdoor

BlogRoll

Travel With Books

Related Categories
• General
Business
Books on CD
Audiobooks
Formats
• Management
Business
Books on CD
Audiobooks
Formats
• Leadership
Management & Leadership
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Management
Management & Leadership
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Abridged
Edition (format)
Refinements
Books
• Books on CD
Audiobooks
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation

The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation
Authors: A.g. Lafley, Ram Charan
Creator: Jason Culp
Publisher: Random House Audio
Category: Book

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $15.96
You Save: $13.99 (47%)



New (27) Used (6) from $15.96

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 229239

Format: Abridged, Audiobook
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Abridged
Number Of Items: 5
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.9 x 5.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0739358375
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.4092
EAN: 9780739358375
ASIN: 0739358375

Publication Date: April 8, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Audiobook. Abridged, on 5 CDs. New, still in the shrink wrap. Ships the next business day, with tracking and delivery confirmation sent to your email.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation
  • Audio Download - The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation
  • Kindle Edition - The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation

Similar Items:

  • The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures
  • Innovation to the Core: A Blueprint for Transforming the Way Your Company Innovates
  • What the Customer Wants You to Know: How Everybody Needs to Think Differently About Sales
  • Executing Your Strategy: How to Break It Down and Get It Done
  • Leaders at All Levels: Deepening Your Talent Pool to Solve the Succession Crisis

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
How you can increase and sustain organic revenue and profit growth . . . whether you’re running an entire company or in your first management job.

Over the past seven years, Procter & Gamble has tripled profits; significantly improved organic revenue growth, cash flow, and operating margins; and averaged earnings per share growth of 12 percent. How? A. G. Lafley and his leadership team have integrated innovation into everything P&G does and created new customers and new markets.

Through eye-opening stories A. G. Lafley and Ram Charan show how P&G and companies such as Honeywell, Nokia, LEGO, GE, HP, and DuPont have become game-changers. Their inspiring lessons can help you learn how to:

• Make consumers and customers the boss, not the CEO or the management team
• Innovate to grow a mature business
• Develop higher growth, higher margin businesses
• Create new customers and new markets
• Revitalize a business model
• Reach outside your own business and tap into the abundant brainpower and creativity of the world
• Integrate innovation into the mainstream of your managerial decision making
• Manage risk
• Become a leader of innovation

We live in a world of unprecedented change, increasing global competitiveness, and the very real threat of commoditization. Innovation in this world is the best way to win—arguably the only way to really win. Innovation is not a separate, discrete activity but the job of everyone in a leadership position and the integral, central driving force for any business that wants to grow organically and succeed on a sustained basis.

This is a game-changing book that helps you redefine your leadership and improve your management game.


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars How to understand change...   November 2, 2008
A.G. Lafley's story of changing P&G's business culture is a must read for anyone interested in "change" -- especialy pertinent for small business owners or developers


5 out of 5 stars Excellent book about customer centricity, segmentation & cultural change   October 5, 2008
This is the story of Procter & Gamble from 2000 till now enriched with anecdotes from other businesses. It is a report of P&G's transformation into a customer-focused enterprise, driven by customer research and new product development. The book is structured around eight key elements that influence customer centricity.
I like this book and can recommend it to anyone involved in innovation- or marketing processes or strategy in his/her organization. It is refreshingly different in its view on innovation and provides first-hand information how even a global enterprise can be changed significantly and the effects of a real customer focus.
There are reviews of this book saying that it contains nothing really new, which I would agree on. But, and this I think is more important, it shows that innovation does not work without a strategy, serious customer segmentation and a clear customer focus in general. It also shows that strategy should in its major part derive from the organization's core competencies. This has significant impact on the market approach. While an industry focused strategy mimics competition, does a core competency and customer centric strategy allow thinking out of the box and creative development of the market edge - the key to competitive-advantage.
In addition to these key lessons the reader will find comprehensive information about the various issues surrounding the implementation of innovation processes such as culture and incentives, organizational learning and infrastructure. These topics are extensively covered in many other books but A.G. Lafley shows how they can be put to use.



5 out of 5 stars Best Business Book Ever   September 7, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Having started, built, and sold my first business to McGraw-Hill and written four business books since, I know a first class business book when I see one.

"The Game Changer" is beyond fist class. It is in a space of its own. The prose is clean and deceptively clear. You risk reading it too quickly. This book is like Kissinger's "Diplomacy": every paragraph is a meal. Two to five pages a day is plenty. I tell Japanese CEOs, "Don't wait for the translation and don't worry if you find English difficult; the less you read at a time, the better." To European CEOs, "If your English so good that you read this an a day, you made a mistake." To Americans, "Whoa! Slow down. This is serious stuff."

What makes "The Game Changer" so good is that it is written by business people for business people. There is nothing theoretical. No business-school speak.

What the book does not say is that when Lafley took over as CEO of Procter and Gamble, its R&D coverage was 2.6. It is now 7.3. Check out how many manage this. Dell gets 4.9. Apple, 5.6.

There are one or two funky bits of phrasing. "Choiceful Strategies" isn't English. And nothing can be "geared around" a technology platform. Nor can anyone be "innovated out" of a market. A better copy editor would have come down hard.

But don't let a few bits of fuzzy English get in the way of a gem. If Lafley ever retires, hire him.



5 out of 5 stars It Can Be Done!   August 30, 2008

I started my career at P&G in brand management. And while the learning was extraordinary, I always felt the company was old, bureaucratic and stodgy. I had the opportunity to work with A.G. Lafley quite a bit in my first assignment, as we were both in laundry brands. He always seemed to me outside the traditional Procter mold--wicked smart but a thoughtful, open-minded and really nice guy.

Fast forward 25 years and what A.G. has done as CEO is incredible. Procter is one battleship that I didn't think could turn, much less on a dime. But reading Game-Changer one begins to appreciate what leadership and commitment can do, even in the largest and most traditional organizations.

Game-Changer is an enlightening read. Lafley and legendary author, consultant and scholar Ram Charan often tag-team the writing, each bringing a unique point of view. Sometimes this gets awkward, as the P&G story is interrupted by examples from other companies (which skew a bit from India, making a noticeably unusual sample). But that's relatively minor criticism compared to the richness of the transformation story at Procter, which has become a leader in commitment to innovation and has reaped significant financial rewards as a result.

The beauty of Game-Changer is that, unlike many business books, it is relevant to both mid-sized companies and corporate giants. For the Fortune 500, P&G's experience is a powerful example that radical and dynamic change is possible (see also GE, Whirlpool and IBM). For smaller companies, change is a lot easier, and the P&G model is full of ideas for potential initiatives.

This is a quick and easy read that never comes across as arrogant or self-serving. It does present itself as an arresting example of a new era in corporate management. I would have never guessed that would have come from Procter & Gamble. In fact, here's the thing. P&G has had a legendary track record over its 170-year history. But frankly, it was never considered a great place to work, at least for the brand management folks. Even more impressive than the reignited financials, the company's commitment to innovation and change make it sound like a really terrific place for a smart marketer to ply his/her trade. Now that's an innovation that will pay long-term dividends.
Bill Aho, www.atclevel.typepad.com



4 out of 5 stars Innovative Innovation Ideas and Process   July 12, 2008
In the early years of business on the web, I was on a panel that addressed marketing in the then mostly new Digital Age. There was a senior executive from Proctor and Gamble on that panel who told the assembled marketers that P & G wasn't going to change because "we've got it all figured out."

As we were packing up, one of the other panelists said, "I don't know about you guys but I'm going home and sell my P & G stock. Any company with an executive that high up who thinks they've got it all figured out is going to go down sooner or later."

I remembered that incident while reading Game-Changer: How you can drive revenue and profit growth with innovation by A. G. Lafley and Ram Charan.

Lafley is the Chairman and CEO of Proctor and Gamble. Charan is neck-and-neck in the race with Warren Bennis for "Most Books Co-Authored by a Guru." Each writes parts of the book in his own voice. They are very different voices.

Lafley's voice is practical and down to earth. Here's a quote from chapter 1. "The Game-Changer is about what I have learned over the course of a lifetime in business, but particularly since I became CEO of P & G."

Charan has a more buzzword-rich style. "P & G is one of the few companies that has been able to break the chains of commoditization and create organic growth on a sustainable basis through implementing and managing the integrated process of innovation."

This is a book about the turnaround at P & G. Since Lafley took over, in June of 2000, the company has tripled profits, and improved revenue growth, cash flow, and operating margins. The stock price has more than doubled.

A significant part of the turnaround was the development of a process for managing innovation at P & G. This book is about that process and how it works.

Those are both Lafley's stories. But this is a better book because Ram Charan adds commentary and examples from other firms.

If you want to learn the back story, chapter one will set the stage for you. After Charan's comments in chapter two, Game-Changer is organized into three parts.

Drawing the Big Picture sets the stage for the other parts. The chapter titled The Customer is Boss is one of those chapters you copy so you can re-read it often.

Every company says they are customer-focused. P & G has been known as a customer-focused company for most of its history. And yet it was easy for the customer to slide from the center of the business to periphery.

Chapter three is the best explanation I've seen of what it means to put the customer at the center of your company. I'd love to see P & G or the publisher put this chapter out as a pamphlet.

Part Two is about the innovation process itself. It begins with a chapter on organizing for innovation. This chapter is one of several that include excellent material on innovation at other companies.

If you're not at a consumer products company, you'll get ideas about how innovation looks in other industries. If you don't think a P & G practice will work at your company, the book gives you some other models.

The next chapter, on integrating innovation into your routine, is one of the best in the book because it concentrates on a key point. For innovation to be a real game-changer, it can't be bolted on to day-to-day operations and responsibilities. It has to be part of the routine, even as it challenges the routine. There's great material here on how ideas get killed and the importance of a regular, social mechanism for approving ideas.

After a chapter on the risks of innovation, the authors move to the final part of the book which discusses the culture of innovation. You'll learn how innovation is a team sport and how a leader's job should include innovation.

This is an idea book, not a how-to book. If you want an innovation manual, pass this book by.

But if you want lots of ideas and examples to hold up against the way you do business now, plunk down your money. Even if you only read the chapter on putting the customer at the center, you'll get lots of return on your investment in this book.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Contact Wolverine Books