Weekly Business Insights

Weekly Business Insights from Top Ten Business Magazines

Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 363 |  August 23-29, 2024 | Archive

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How to attract Indian tourists

The Economist | August 22, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Indians are on the move. In 2019 international departures from India hit 27m, a number that will surely be exceeded this year and is predicted to rise to 90m by 2040. Annual spending on foreign travel by Indians will nearly triple to $89bn in three years. Airlines’ networks are being expanded and redesigned to handle larger numbers of Indian tourists. Many trips are for business or to visit friends and family. But about 40% are pure leisure, and holidaymakers pack fat wallets.
  2. Around the world tourism boards, hotels and restaurateurs are starting to compete for Indian travellers, especially in the Middle East and South-East Asia.
  3. But how should countries attract Indian travellers?  Step one is to make it easier for them to get in.  One way to win the attention of Indian globetrotters is to collaborate with Bollywood.  Diplomacy can also help.  After Narendra Modi’s each visit interest in that destination shoots up.  There is one more thing: it must offer them food they enjoy.

Full Article

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Topics:  Tourism, Indians, Travel & Hospitality, Bollywood, Diplomacy, Food

Dual transformation: Optimizing the core and building new businesses

By Ari Libarikian et al., | McKinsey & Company | August 23, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. In recent years, the world has experienced significant disruptions to the global economy—with lasting effects.  At the same time, the market landscape has been shifting in fundamental ways. Corporate longevity is at an all-time low, for instance.  Given these trends, corporate reinvention has become more important than ever, especially for established companies looking to achieve sustained growth in the face of new competition.
  2. Indeed, growth can come from a dual transformation that involves reinventing and transforming the core business and building new businesses.
  3. The opportunities organizations could have while following the two-pronged strategy are in by creating quick wins for cash and long-term value generation, building rigor into performance management, reimagining new-business building, and establishing organizational health with best-in-class talent.  To trigger reinvention journey the organizations can have the options of have an integrated launch of a core transformation and new business growth, prioritize a core transformation before new-business development, or take business building as a trigger for broader transformation.  In this whole process five principles leaders can follow to help ensure impactful outcomes are: articulate a compelling vision for dual reinvention, establish a clear road map rooted in long-term thinking, strengthen the functional ‘common chassis’ for long-term gains, put people front and center and establish a performance infrastructure.

Full Article

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Topics:  Strategy, Business Model, Competitive Advantage, Core, New Businesses, Innovation

Aliens, rovers and energy crystals: How Lego’s obsession with detail has kept fans hooked for 92 years and counting

By Prarthana Prakash  | Fortune Magazine | August 25, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. In 2024, few companies have been able to replicate Lego’s success.
  2. Over the decades, Lego could very well have been replaced by more addictive and appealing electronic gadgets. But that wasn’t the case.  What, then, is Lego’s secret sauce to keep kids (and, more recently, adults) hooked to its colorful bricks? 
  3. The following secretes:  Its ability to captured kids’ imaginations as a realm of endless opportunities.  Listening the kids.  The quality of Lego’s bricks that can get passed from one generation to the next. Parents think their kids could gain something good from Lego toys, whether that’s engineering abilities or using their creativity.  Lego has developed a well-oiled machine to help it constantly generate new ideas.  Its marketing strategy enabling it to price its products pricer than latest iphone and pulling the product out of the market, making them rare.  And the company’s penchant for detail applies not just to its space creations or toy development process but also to its business.

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Topics:  Strategy, Business Model, Creativity, Innovation, Lego, Gaming, Marketing Strategy

New Rules for Teamwork

By Angus Dawson and Katy George | Harvard Business Review Magazine | September–October 2024 Issue

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Traditional thinking around how to innovate teamwork has often been based on intuition and observation, with a dash of psychology. None of this has yet cohered into a systematic approach to improving how teams work.
  2. In recent years at McKinsey devoted considerable time and investment to develop a new science of teamwork for its organization.  This approach allows McKinsey to understand how its 4,000-plus teams are performing and to intervene when necessary. It combines the best of established wisdom with new data-driven techniques and insights. It relies on testing, learning, analysis, adaptation, and improvement—in real time and with accountability—to enable continuous learning. And it includes metrics that link practices to outcomes, for both individuals and teams.  
  3. Three key principles of this approach that can help teams in any organization perform at their best are:  Develop an Operating System, Invest in Active, Real-Time Measurement, and Create a System for Continuous Improvement and Innovation.

Full Article

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Topics:  Teams, Collaboration, Communication, Diversification, Innovation, Creativity, Cross-sectional Teams

Seven Truths About Hybrid Work and Productivity

By Lynda Gratton  | MIT Sloan Management Review | August 14, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. Our collective experience of the pandemic enabled us to conduct endless experiments with work. Initially, the experiments were about where work took place (the home becoming a viable option), and soon they became about when work took place (the rigors of nine-to-five morphing into more flexible arrangements). Even now, leaders are watching with some combination of unease, hope, and curiosity to see what effects these experiments are having on the organization, especially on workers’ productivity.
  2. From a study, seven truths about hybrid work and productivity have begun to emerge:  hybrid work is a continuum, it’s crucial to communicate policies straightforwardly, leaders need to be prepared for the trade-offs in hybrid work, acknowledge differing narratives about the impact of hybrid working on productivity, productivity is usually challenging — and measurement is always complex, an expanded set of productivity measures needs to be part of the conversation, and It’s useful to view hybrid work as fundamentally a job design option.

Full Article

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Topics:  Hybrid Work, Productivity, Teams, Collaboration

The GINI Framework: How To Navigate A Gloomy, Insecure, Nontransparent And Inconsistent World

By Gia Tskhovrebadze | Forbes Magazine | August 28, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. In light of the unprecedented global events, crises and predictions after Covid-19, sometimes it seems that the world has gone mad. The world-describing frameworks like VUCA—volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous—or BANI—brittle, anxious, nonlinear and incomprehensible—helped us understand the complexity of the world over the years.
  2. However, over the last two or three years, we have seen several crises and problems in various areas, such as catastrophic weather events, geopolitical rifts, economic instability and burgeoning fake news. These problems have drastically changed the global landscape to a more unsafe and depressive one, now demanding a new structure to understand and navigate the difficulties of our time. Here you have what the author calls the GINI framework: gloomy, insecure, nontransparent and inconsistent.
  3. To cope with GINI companies and governments need to pay greater attention to mental health, increase investment in cybersecurity, adapt to rapid technological advancements, commit to transparency, overcome economic discrepancies, and adhere to environmental responsibility.

Full Article

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Topics:  Uncertainty, Inconsistency, Gloomy, Insecurity, Nontransparent, Mental Framework

Warren Buffett Says 5 Key Decisions Define True Success in Life. 

By Marcel Schwantes | Inc. Magazine | August 28, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. Warren Buffett, the Oracle of Omaha, has transformed simple investing principles into extraordinary wealth. But what makes Buffett truly remarkable isn’t just his financial acumen–his timeless wisdom offers valuable lessons for anyone looking to build a successful future.
  2. How has Buffett defined success over the years? For summarizing purpose, these could be boiled down to five life decisions that Buffett has repeatedly said:  protect your reputation at all cost, invest in yourself, find a mentor, take care of yourself, and prioritize the personal relationship.

Full Article

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Topics:  Entrepreneurship, Decision-making, Branding

8 Pieces of Advice for Unconventional Entrepreneurs from a Minority Female Founder 

By Jacqueline Samira | Edited by Micah Zimmerman | Entrepreneur Magazine | August 28, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. Are you an aspiring business owner who doesn’t fit the traditional mold? Don’t let a lack of stereotypical leadership qualities keep you from taking the head seat at the table.  According to the author she was shy and accommodating — not exactly traits that suggested I had a future in entrepreneurship.  She made up for what she lacked in entrepreneurial qualities like assertiveness and risk-seeking with hard work and tenacity.
  2. Her fundamental tips for unconventional budding entrepreneurs are:  Eliminate unnecessary risks.  Uncover the unknown unknowns.  Identify a problem.  Understand your audience.  Get comfortable with rejection.  Believe in your idea.  Team up.  And celebrate unconventional strengths.

Full Article

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Topics:  Entrepreneurship, Startups, Idea, Resilience, Decision-making