The New Killer Apps: How Large Companies Can Out-Innovate Start-Ups"An erudite anthem for large companies reshaping themselves to innovate and compete with agile startups." -- Kirkus Reviews A Kirkus Indie Books of the Month Selection and recipient of a Kirkus Star for "Exceptional Merit" "An important book for the boards and managements of every company dealing with the avalanche of technological change." "This book's eight innovation rules represent the difference between big companies leveraging their assets or getting their assets whooped." "This is the best business book I've read in very many years. It absolutely nails how to and how not to innovate." "Great work The more I read, the more I couldn't put it down." Overview The New Killer Apps reverses the conventional wisdom that start-ups are destined to out-innovate big, established businesses. Through crisp analysis and compelling case studies, Mui and Carroll show that this just isn't true. Or, at least, it need not be. Yes, small and agile beats big and slow, but big and agile beats anyone. This book offers a roadmap for how large companies can Think Big, Start Small and Learn Fast. In doing so, they can get out of their own way, take advantage of their natural assets, and vanquish both traditional competitors and upstarts by nurturing and unleashing their own killer apps. There's certainly a lot on the line. A perfect storm of technological innovation-combining smartphones and other mobile devices, ubiquitous cameras and sensors, social media and "big data" analytical tools-means that more than $36 trillion of stock-market value is up for what Mary Meeker at Kleiner Perkins is calling "reimagination." Large companies will either do the reimagining and lay claim to the markets of the future or will be reimagined out of existence. Table of Contents Foreword by James Madara, M.D., CEO, American Medical Association GETTING STARTED PHASE ONE: THINK BIG PHASE TWO: START SMALL PHASE THREE: LEARN FAST Conclusion Afterword: Moving from Innovation to Invention |