How you can increase and sustain organic revenue and profit growth . . .  whether you’re running an entire company or in your first management  job.
Over the past seven years, Procter & Gamble has tripled profits;  significantly improved organic revenue growth, cash flow, and operating  margins; and averaged earnings per share growth of 12 percent. How? A.  G. Lafley and his leadership team have integrated innovation into  everything P&G does and created new customers and new markets.
Through eye-opening stories A. G. Lafley and Ram Charan show how P&G  and companies such as Honeywell, Nokia, LEGO, GE, HP, and DuPont have  become game-changers. Their inspiring lessons can help you learn how to:
• Make consumers and customers the boss, not the CEO or the management  team
• Innovate to grow a mature business
• Develop higher growth, higher margin businesses
• Create new customers and new markets
• Revitalize a business model
• Reach outside your own business and tap into the abundant brainpower  and creativity of the world
• Integrate innovation into the mainstream of your managerial decision  making
• Manage risk
• Become a leader of innovation
We live in a world of unprecedented change, increasing global  competitiveness, and the very real threat of commoditization. Innovation  in this world is the best way to win—arguably the only way to really  win. Innovation is not a separate, discrete activity but the job of  everyone in a leadership position and the integral, central driving  force for any business that wants to grow organically and succeed on a  sustained basis.
This is a game-changing book that helps you redefine your leadership and  improve your management game.
*Starred Review* Blessings to Procter & Gamble—or, more exactly, its  chairman and CEO, A. G. Lafley. Together with Charan, author of  Know-How (2007) (and the most probable successor to management guru  Peter F. Drucker), he defines, describes, draws examples of, and  delineates how innovation became a part of not only the behemoth  consumer-packaged-goods company but also part of Lego and Nokia (among  others). Lafley is remarkably candid; the story of his “surprise” ascent  to CEO-dom in 2000, taking over from Durk Jager, is the story of  transformation. A number of commandments accompanied the company’s  innovationcentric strategy: the consumer is boss, inside and outside  cocreation is encouraged, the innovation process is tangible (and must  be followed), and risks can be managed. Most important is his emphasis  on human interaction as the key; even better, the last section focuses  exclusively on developing a culture of innovation, from promoting the  rules of brainstorming to the desired attributes for employees and  leaders: courageous, connected and collaborative, curious, open.  Sidebars are worthy of posting on a bulletin board; in fact, this is a  sustainable reference on innovation that will be hard to beat. --Barbara  Jacobs
Review
“A. G. Lafley has made Procter & Gamble great again.”
—The Economist
“Of all the firms on the 2007 ranking of the ‘World’s Most Innovative  Companies,’ few are more closely associated with today’s innovation  zeitgeist than . . . Procter & Gamble . . . now famous for its open  approach to innovation.”
—BusinessWeek
“Lafley brought a whole lot of creativity and rigor to P&G’s  innovation process.” —Fortune magazine
“A. G. Lafley has reenergized a venerable giant . . . with a style and  energy that will be the subject of business school cases for years to  come.” —Chief Executive magazine
“The proof of Lafley’s approach is plain enough. . . . P&G has not  only doubled the number of new products . . . but also more than doubled  its portfolio of billion-dollar brands and its stock price.”
—U.S. News & World Report
“Ram Charan is the most influential consultant alive.”
—Fortune magazine
“Ram has this rare ability to distill meaningful frommeaningless.”
—Jack Welch
“Among the world’s most sought after CEO advisers.”
—BusinessWeek
“Ram Charan is my ‘secret weapon’ . . . constantly providing depth to  issues, not just answers.”
—Ivan Seidenberg, chairman and CEO of Verizon Communications
“Ram Charan knows more about corporate America than anyone.”
—Dick Harrington, CEO of The Thomson Corporation 
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