Description

Book Synopsis
Praise for Wide Angle Vision

In this book, Wayne Burkan shows us that the vantage points from which we view and act can earn us critical advantages if we are willing to stretch our thoughts and practices beyond the edge of conventional thinking. - Robert W. Galvin Chairman of the Executive Committee and former CEO of Motorola

Wayne Burkan''s Wide-Angle Vision is a very pragmatic and useful guide to dealing with and implementing change. His concept of ''edge'' as it relates to customers, employees, and competitors should help many organizations struggling with the rapidly changing marketplace and the endless panaceas being promoted. - David R. Stamper Vice President and General Manager, Hitachi Data Systems, Latin American Division

At Southwest Airlines, we redefined air transportation by utilizing ''edge thinking.'' Wayne Burkan is offering a ''flight plan'' that if studied, understood, and followed, will improve your bottom line for the long term. If you rea

Table of Contents

1 Diamonds Beneath Your Feet 1

A Force within Reach 3

Introducing the Edge 5

Forklifts Fall Flat 5

The Curse of Success 7

Protecting the Crown Jewels 8

Finding Your Achilles’ Heel 9

Help Comes Knocking 10

2 Why Those on Top don’t Stay There 14

Invisibility 16

Impossibility 17

Transferability 21

3 Disgruntled Customers 25

The Five Percent Winner’s Circles 25

The Nature of the Edge 27

Meet Your Customers on the Edge 28

Invisible Customers 29

Complaining Customers 32

Lost Customers 35

Listening to Your Edge Customers 37

Case Study: Customers on the Edge 40

Expanding Market Share through Disgruntled Customers 44

4 Fringe Competitors 48

Looking at the Wrong Competitors 49

Creating Your Competition 51

Competitors at the Gates 52

5 Rogue Employees 59

Case Study: Miles Apart from the Rest 60

Java – The One That Almost Got Away 62

Case Study: Dissidents within Professional Organizations 64

Case Study: The Wiz That Woz 66

Suppliers on the Edge 67

Knowing Who to Listen To 67

6 Avoiding Crisis, Reducing Surprise 71

The See, or Not to See . . . 72

The End of Forecasting 74

Selecting Your Target 76

Breaking the Pattern 76

Learning from the Future 77

Four Powerful Anticipation Skills 78

Searching the Future 80

Why Don’t You Hear about Anticipation? 87

7 What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You 90

Signals from the Future 90

Identifying People working on Your Hardest Problems 91

Evaluating the Rule Breakers 94

Recognizing Your Diminishing Return 101

Looking for the Bandwagon 103

Learning from the Language We Use 104

Tracking Historical Patterns 105

8 Creating Sizzling Teams 110

The Benefits of Brain Damage 110

Teams That Blast through Problems 111

How Do Edge Teams Differ? 116

The Disbelief of Teams 118

Your Working Team 119

9 The World at Your Fingertips 121

Virtual Reality at Work 122

Creating an Ideal Team 123

Investing in Change 128

Designing Your Own Ideal Team 130

Creative Solutions with Your Ideal Team 132

Uses for Your Ideal Team 135

10 working with Those on the Edge 138

Plugging Your Innovation Leak: Employees on the Edge 138

How to Attract the Edge 142

My Most Painful Lesson 143

Altering Patterns 145

Benign Neglect 147

Predicting Resistance to Change 148

Take Me to Your Leader 150

11 Truly Delighting Your Customer 152

Why Focus Groups and Survey Fail 154

Be Careful Where You Walk 155

Your Customers’ Customers 157

The Bleeding Edge 158

12 Breakthroughs for Your Toughest Problems 161

The Art of the Impossible 161

Knowl-edge for the Asking 162

Finding Your Savior on the Edge 164

The Consolation Prize 171

Simulating Saviors 173

13 Why Organizational Change Is So Hard 176

Beyond Leadership 177

Ford Follies 178

The Secret to Organizational Inertia 181

Training’s Fatal Flaw 182

The Limitation of Leadership 183

14 Change – Fast and Efficient 186

The Ford Solution 187

Top-Down or Bottom-Up Change 189

Government in Revolt 190

15 Beyond Reengineering 192

The Illusion of Reengineering 193

What Is Right with Reengineering? 194

What Is Wrong with Reengineering? 195

Blistering Fast Reengineering 200

A Powerful Alternative to Traditional Reengineering 200

The Seven Steps to Streamline Reengineering 201

16 Dealing with Your Ever-Present Detractors 207

“There Are a Lot of Crazy Ideas Out There” 207

“We Don’t Have Enough Resources or Time” 212

“Salespeople Should Not Take Their Eyes Off the Ball” 213

17 Leading on the Edge 215

Falling through the Cracks 215

Your Organization’s Business Theory 216

Disaster Plucked from the Jaws of Success 217

Planning: Back to the Future 218

How I Destroyed Two Companies 219

Planning on the Edge 225

Core Competency or Core Deficiency 227

Examining Business Theory 233

Executive Information Delivery 233

18 Surefire Ways to Reduce Resistance 236

Predicting Resistance 236

Time: The Double-Edged Sword 237

Becoming Superman 239

Proaction and Reaction 245

The Change Agent’s Fatal Flaw 247

The Perfect Change Agent 252

Breaking Down the Walls 253

The Insult of Change 258

Notes 262

Index 268

WideAngle Vision

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    A Hardback by Wayne C. Burkan

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of WideAngle Vision by Wayne C. Burkan

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 04/10/1996
      ISBN13: 9780471134169, 978-0471134169
      ISBN10: 0471134163

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Praise for Wide Angle Vision

      In this book, Wayne Burkan shows us that the vantage points from which we view and act can earn us critical advantages if we are willing to stretch our thoughts and practices beyond the edge of conventional thinking. - Robert W. Galvin Chairman of the Executive Committee and former CEO of Motorola

      Wayne Burkan''s Wide-Angle Vision is a very pragmatic and useful guide to dealing with and implementing change. His concept of ''edge'' as it relates to customers, employees, and competitors should help many organizations struggling with the rapidly changing marketplace and the endless panaceas being promoted. - David R. Stamper Vice President and General Manager, Hitachi Data Systems, Latin American Division

      At Southwest Airlines, we redefined air transportation by utilizing ''edge thinking.'' Wayne Burkan is offering a ''flight plan'' that if studied, understood, and followed, will improve your bottom line for the long term. If you rea

      Table of Contents

      1 Diamonds Beneath Your Feet 1

      A Force within Reach 3

      Introducing the Edge 5

      Forklifts Fall Flat 5

      The Curse of Success 7

      Protecting the Crown Jewels 8

      Finding Your Achilles’ Heel 9

      Help Comes Knocking 10

      2 Why Those on Top don’t Stay There 14

      Invisibility 16

      Impossibility 17

      Transferability 21

      3 Disgruntled Customers 25

      The Five Percent Winner’s Circles 25

      The Nature of the Edge 27

      Meet Your Customers on the Edge 28

      Invisible Customers 29

      Complaining Customers 32

      Lost Customers 35

      Listening to Your Edge Customers 37

      Case Study: Customers on the Edge 40

      Expanding Market Share through Disgruntled Customers 44

      4 Fringe Competitors 48

      Looking at the Wrong Competitors 49

      Creating Your Competition 51

      Competitors at the Gates 52

      5 Rogue Employees 59

      Case Study: Miles Apart from the Rest 60

      Java – The One That Almost Got Away 62

      Case Study: Dissidents within Professional Organizations 64

      Case Study: The Wiz That Woz 66

      Suppliers on the Edge 67

      Knowing Who to Listen To 67

      6 Avoiding Crisis, Reducing Surprise 71

      The See, or Not to See . . . 72

      The End of Forecasting 74

      Selecting Your Target 76

      Breaking the Pattern 76

      Learning from the Future 77

      Four Powerful Anticipation Skills 78

      Searching the Future 80

      Why Don’t You Hear about Anticipation? 87

      7 What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You 90

      Signals from the Future 90

      Identifying People working on Your Hardest Problems 91

      Evaluating the Rule Breakers 94

      Recognizing Your Diminishing Return 101

      Looking for the Bandwagon 103

      Learning from the Language We Use 104

      Tracking Historical Patterns 105

      8 Creating Sizzling Teams 110

      The Benefits of Brain Damage 110

      Teams That Blast through Problems 111

      How Do Edge Teams Differ? 116

      The Disbelief of Teams 118

      Your Working Team 119

      9 The World at Your Fingertips 121

      Virtual Reality at Work 122

      Creating an Ideal Team 123

      Investing in Change 128

      Designing Your Own Ideal Team 130

      Creative Solutions with Your Ideal Team 132

      Uses for Your Ideal Team 135

      10 working with Those on the Edge 138

      Plugging Your Innovation Leak: Employees on the Edge 138

      How to Attract the Edge 142

      My Most Painful Lesson 143

      Altering Patterns 145

      Benign Neglect 147

      Predicting Resistance to Change 148

      Take Me to Your Leader 150

      11 Truly Delighting Your Customer 152

      Why Focus Groups and Survey Fail 154

      Be Careful Where You Walk 155

      Your Customers’ Customers 157

      The Bleeding Edge 158

      12 Breakthroughs for Your Toughest Problems 161

      The Art of the Impossible 161

      Knowl-edge for the Asking 162

      Finding Your Savior on the Edge 164

      The Consolation Prize 171

      Simulating Saviors 173

      13 Why Organizational Change Is So Hard 176

      Beyond Leadership 177

      Ford Follies 178

      The Secret to Organizational Inertia 181

      Training’s Fatal Flaw 182

      The Limitation of Leadership 183

      14 Change – Fast and Efficient 186

      The Ford Solution 187

      Top-Down or Bottom-Up Change 189

      Government in Revolt 190

      15 Beyond Reengineering 192

      The Illusion of Reengineering 193

      What Is Right with Reengineering? 194

      What Is Wrong with Reengineering? 195

      Blistering Fast Reengineering 200

      A Powerful Alternative to Traditional Reengineering 200

      The Seven Steps to Streamline Reengineering 201

      16 Dealing with Your Ever-Present Detractors 207

      “There Are a Lot of Crazy Ideas Out There” 207

      “We Don’t Have Enough Resources or Time” 212

      “Salespeople Should Not Take Their Eyes Off the Ball” 213

      17 Leading on the Edge 215

      Falling through the Cracks 215

      Your Organization’s Business Theory 216

      Disaster Plucked from the Jaws of Success 217

      Planning: Back to the Future 218

      How I Destroyed Two Companies 219

      Planning on the Edge 225

      Core Competency or Core Deficiency 227

      Examining Business Theory 233

      Executive Information Delivery 233

      18 Surefire Ways to Reduce Resistance 236

      Predicting Resistance 236

      Time: The Double-Edged Sword 237

      Becoming Superman 239

      Proaction and Reaction 245

      The Change Agent’s Fatal Flaw 247

      The Perfect Change Agent 252

      Breaking Down the Walls 253

      The Insult of Change 258

      Notes 262

      Index 268

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