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reviews
Feb 06, 2009
It did present some interesting ideas about the future of innovation and how companies will be organized in the future. The whole idea of N=1 and R=G seems to be pretty valid. I see companies moving that way, but I don't think that all of them will or can.
I think he rambled on a little too long. The concluding chapter wasn't all that bad, and I think it expressed his main points pretty well. That chapter could have been the whole book and you wouldn't miss much. However, the other chapters More...
I think he rambled on a little too long. The concluding chapter wasn't all that bad, and I think it expressed his main points pretty well. That chapter could have been the whole book and you wouldn't miss much. However, the other chapters More...
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Jul 31, 2011
solid examples from India and US that exemplify the future of business innovation: co-creation of personalized experience, melting of hardware software and services into 1. nice mathematical like acronym N=1, R=G.
Aug 13, 2011
American English is not the author's native language, which makes this book difficult. However, there are a ton of great ideas in this book. The only problem, most businesses that can afford them are too bureaucratic to implement them.
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