Competing Against Luck: The Story of Innovation and Customer Choice

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Product Details
Price
$32.00  $29.76
Publisher
Harper Business
Publish Date
Pages
288
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.2 X 1.0 inches | 1.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780062435613

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About the Author

TADDY HALL is a principal with the Cambridge Group and a leader of Nielsen's Breakthrough Innovation Project. In these capacities, he helps senior executives create successful new products and improve innovation processes. He also works extensively with executives in emerging markets as an advisor to the nonprofit Endeavor.

Karen Dillon teaches literature and writing at Blackburn College in Carlinville, Illinois, where she specializes in American and African-American literature. She lives in Carlinville.

DAVID S. DUNCAN is a senior partner at Innosight. He's a leading thinker and advisor to senior executives on innovation strategy and growth, helping them navigate disruptive change, create sustainable growth, and transform their organizations to thrive for the long term. He is a graduate of Duke University and earned a PhD in physics from Harvard University.

Clayton M. Christensen is the Kim B. Clark Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School and the architect of and the world's foremost authority on disruptive innovation.

Reviews
The Theory of Jobs to Be Done has the essential trait of any good management theory: Once explained, it seems glaringly obvious.--Philip Delves Broughton, Wall Street Journal
Clay Christensen and his co-authors have presented critical business thinkers and doers with a breakthrough theory that will change how leaders approach innovation by reverse engineering from a high value and focused customer job to be done. I have read it cover to cover--and will ask my top team to do the same.--Ron Frank, IBM
Competing Against Luck is an excellent primer on the both the theory, and on the applications of this theory to many areas of business. A fun and quick read - and a set of ideas that will be useful when you negotiate with vendors or plan your next program.-- Inside Higher Education
This game-changing book is filled with compelling real world examples, including from inside Intuit. Jobs Theory has had --and will continue to have ---a profound influence on Intuit's approach to innovation. It just might change yours, too.--Scott Cook, Co-founder & Chairman of Intuit
Clayton Christensen's books on innovation are mandatory reading at Netflix.--Reed Hastings, Co-founder and CEO of Netflix
Competing Against Luck offers fresh thinking on how to get innovation right. Clayton Christensen and his coauthors offer a compelling take on how to truly understand customers by the progress they're seeking to make in their lives. Bravo!--Muhtar Kent, CEO of The Coca-Cola Company
In an age of big data and hyper segmentation, Christensen's thinking is refreshing and clarifying. This book will relieve you of tired marketing conversations and invite you into worlds of new and ultimately, defining possibilities. Competing Against Luck is a must read for anyone working on developing or sustaining a distinctive brand.--Maureen Chiquet, former CEO of Chanel and author of forthcoming Beyond the Label
As a long-time fan of Clay Christensen, I was eager to read Competing Against Luck -- and it didn't disappoint. This book has the potential to change the way you view innovation. Engaging and well-written, Christensen and his co-authors caused me to stop and really think about how Khan Academy is growing. I highly recommend it.--Sal Khan, Founder & CEO, Khan Academy
[Competing Against Luck] will likely become part of the thoughtful founder's strategy arsenal. True to its unpretentious name, jobs theory is disarmingly simple... "What job is our customer trying to accomplish?" stands as one of those great business questions that companies deploy to stimulate creative juices at the start of meetings. But Competing Against Luck doesn't just introduce a tool, it also lays out a program.--Inc. Magazine