by Dr Ken Hudson | Dec 3, 2015 | Disruption, How to become a creative leader, How to reinvent your product, brand, business or career
Is this the scariest question any leader can be asked? What’s your disruption strategy? As a facilitator I have found that leaders answer this question in basically two ways. 1. Yes we have one. What does it say? Is it still relevant? Are you being disrupted now...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Dec 2, 2015 | Disruption, How to become a creative leader, How to grow your Revenue
Uber is not an example of Disruption Apparently not according to Harvard Professor Clayton Christensen in the December, 2015 edition of HBR. The good professor is best remembered for coining the term disruption and developing a ground-breaking theory on how...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Dec 1, 2015 | Disruption, How to become a creative leader, How to reinvent your product, brand, business or career
Disrupt the customer experience not the industry Everyone wants to disrupt everything. Or so it seems. Uber has disrupted the taxi industry, Amazon the book industry etc etc. But here is the problem. I don’t think these companies originally set out to disrupt...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Nov 29, 2015 | Disruption, How to become a creative leader, How to improve your Sales & Marketing, How to reinvent your product, brand, business or career
What to do when you have been disrupted? Test cricket matches played over 5 days have been around for over 150 years. Yet dwindling crowds has suggested that they were showing all the signs of disruption. One day cricket then the 20:20 version provided a seemingly...
by Dr Ken Hudson | Nov 26, 2015 | Creative Thinking Techniques, Disruption, How to become a creative leader, How to improve your Sales & Marketing, How to reinvent your product, brand, business or career, How to run an awesome Brainstorming Session, Workshop Facilitator
A,B,C,D…… What’s the next letter in this pattern? It’s of course the letter ‘E’ according to the alphabet we are all familiar with. The Alphabet is a pattern. Our brain likes to think in patterns because it’s more efficient....