Publisher: Wiley, 2000, 342 pages
ISBN: 0-471-89969-0
Keywords: Knowledge Management
In the e-business economy, managers are faced with too much data and too little meaningful information about markets, customers, products, company operations and finances. Their greatest challenge is to identify, manage and use the right information to compete. Information management is too important to a company's performance and growth to be delegated primarily to IT, information or financial specialists.
This book is based on the idea that information management is the responsibility of every manager. Managers may not be IT specialists, but they must create the conditions for effective information use that creates real business value.
Donald Marchand and his colleagues at IMD invite you to learn your information responsibilities, so your company can use information faster, better and smarter than the competition. By using the business framework of 'strategic information alignment,' this book shows how information can create business value through delighting customers, being more innovative, managing risks and being the low-cost leader in your markets and industries. Learn the why, what and how of better information use and management in your company.
At last, here is a book about managing information written specifically for business managers. Developed from the executive teaching, consulting and real world research of a team of faculty who work with the world's leading global companies every day, this book provides managers with the mindset and guidance to leverage the company's capabilities to use and manage information to create business value.
Structured as a set of small articles, it is easily digested, and so well written, that you constantly clamor for more.
A very well thought out book, that can be used inside KM as well as a general management book, as the concepts the authors bring up, has bearing on nearly all managers under the sun.
It is an excellent resource for the practitioner, a joy to read and a very strong recommendation! In short, not to be missed! The only caveat is that the reader needs to be educated to MBA-level before s/he can fully appreciate everything that the authors take for granted that everyone understands.
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