Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights

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Extractive summaries and key takeaways from the articles curated from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES to promote informed business decision-making | Since 2017 | Week 368 |   Sep 27-Oct 3, 2024 | Archive

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Shaping Section

How India can compete in labour-intensive manufacturing

The Economist | September 26, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. The share of Indians who work in manufacturing is lower than in comparable countries, at 11%, and has not much budged for years. Exports of textiles and garments, one of the biggest sub-sectors, have actually fallen in value over a decade. Some economists think the time when India could develop through labour-intensive manufacturing of this sort has passed. India’s textile and garments industry that, as a whole, exports far less than it could.  Yet the achievements and challenges of somes of the superstars exporters suggests that there are still lots of ways to help such firms grow.
  2. For some the explanation is poor education in India, which has left workers short of skills.  Weak infrastructure and insurance markets also get blamed. Instead three things hold India back: over protective labour laws, elimination of trade relaxation by USA and EU, and it is hard to persuade Indian workers to leave farms and join factories full time.

Full Article

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Topics:  Global Economy, Manufacturing, India’s Textile & Garments Industry, Employment, Farms, Labor laws

Asia–Pacific’s family office boom: Opportunity knocks

By Bernhard Kotanko et al., | McKinsey & Company | September 9, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. According to McKinsey analysis, between 2023 and 2030, ultra-high-net-worth and high-net-worth families in the Asia–Pacific region are set to experience an intergenerational wealth transfer estimated at $5.8 trillion. When thinking about the Asia–Pacific region’s family offices, two key jurisdictions play an outsize role: Hong Kong and Singapore.  The hubs for such entities in Asia–Pacific, has quadrupled since 2020 to about 4,000 across both jurisdictions.
  2. Five common challenges these family businesses face are: weak governance, rising operational costs, limited access to bespoke alternative solutions for portfolio diversification, limited understanding of insurance products and adjacent value-added services, and out-of-date technology. 
  3. The growth trend presents a substantial opportunity for banks, insurers, multi-family offices, asset managers, and WealthTechs (technology-enabled wealth fintechs that offer low-cost, personalized, automated advice), all of which can offer differentiated services to new and established family offices.  Four key questions that service providers can use to jump-start their discussions of how to best serve Asia–Pacific’s family offices are related to scalability. service, security and solutions.

Full Article

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Topics:  Family-businesses, Wealth, Succession Planning, South Pacific, Singapore, Hong Kong

Strategy & Business Model Section

AI Won’t Give You a New Sustainable Advantage

By Jay B. Barney and Martin Reeves | Harvard Business Review Magazine | September–October 2024 Issue

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. History has shown that technological innovation can profoundly change how business is conducted. But relatively few technologies went on to become direct sources of sustained competitive advantage for the companies that deployed them, precisely because their effects were so profound and so widespread that virtually every enterprise was compelled to adopt them. Moreover, in many cases they eliminated the advantages that incumbents had enjoyed, allowing new competitors to enter previously stable markets.
  2. There’s no doubt that gen AI will create a lot of value.  Smart early movers in sectors adopting gen AI have certainly captured some of this value in the short term. But relatively soon all surviving companies in those sectors will have applied gen AI, and it won’t be a source of competitive advantage for any one of them. In fact, it will be more likely to remove a competitive advantage than to confer one. But here’s a silver lining: If you already have a competitive advantage that rivals cannot replicate using AI, the technology may serve to amplify the value you derive from that advantage.

Full Article

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Topics:  Straregy, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Sustained Competitive Advantage

Intel’s years of missteps leave it fighting for survival in the Nvidia-dominated AI era

By Jeremy Kahn | Fortune Magazine | September 24, 2024

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3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Gelsinger, who was named CEO of Intel in 2021, has essentially bet the company on 18A, a new chipmaking process. He hopes it will position Intel as a viable alternative to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s leading contract manufacturer of chips.
  2. The reason for Intel’s struggles is clear: It fell victim to a classic innovator’s dilemma—not once but twice. First, early in the 21st century, its preoccupation with producing chips for PCs and data centers led it to miss the smartphone revolution. Then, in the past decade, it missed the emergence of chips designed for artificial intelligence.
  3. Gelsinger is racing to reverse Intel’s slide by repositioning the company around manufacturing excellence, while also trying to establish Intel as a player in the market for AI chips. Many are skeptical he can pull it off and fear the company may be in permanent decline. 

Full Article

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Topics:  Strategy, Business Model, Technology, Intel, Nvidia, Failure, Experimentation

Personal Development, Leading & Managing Section

Four Ways to Energize Your Dull Team Meetings

By Alexander Loudon | MIT Sloan Management Review | September 30, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. What can leaders do about lack of engagement in meetings? Many turn to rational approaches to keep meetings moving, such as offering attendees detailed agendas, prereads, and time management strategies. But that’s not enough. Meetings are more than transactional exchanges — they involve people who grapple with emotions, struggle with complexity, and are prone to influence by others.
  2. By shaking up the usual, addressing the elephant in the room, making everyone feel heard, and respecting your company’s DNA (its deeply rooted strengths and core values), you can transform meetings from apathetic to energetic. These strategies may require you to confront challenging structural issues and team dynamics. It will also take some trial and error to find what works and resonates with your team. The benefits, however, are undeniable: a productive, engaged, and connected team. You’ll see an improvement in meeting outcomes, and you might even find that meetings stop feeling like a chore.

Full Article

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Topics:  Teams, Meeting, Productivity, Culture, Leadership

5 Roles Of A Systems Leader In Driving Organizational Change

By Thomas Lim | Forbes Magazine | October 2, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. At this time of the year, many organizations are drafting their work plans for the year ahead. During this season, numerous change projects are being birthed in service of the grand strategic vision. For each approved initiative, resources are allocated and a project team is formed. While this might work for standalone projects, increasingly, dealing with complex external environments and internal structures means that organizations must adopt a systemic view of the whole.  This means that driving organizational change is more than just the sum of all “change projects.” It requires teams that are adept at navigating complexity, fostering collaboration and sustaining momentum. 
  2. The concept of systems leadership offers a powerful framework for guiding transformational change, focusing on five key roles: Steward: Building Confidence By Leading From The Emerging Future; Theory Builder: Building Consensus By Concretizing Theories; Designer: Building Culture By Being A Change Agent; Coach: Building Capacity By Increasing Competence; and Teacher: Building Commitment By Role Modeling.  Each role embodies essential capabilities that, when combined, create a robust transformation team capable of leading change with agility and purpose.

Full Article

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Topics:  Leadership, System Leadership,

Entrepreneurship Section

7 Basic Facts of Business Life for Focus in Growing Your Own

By Martin Zwilling | Inc Magazine | September 29, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. According to the author when he started mentoring aspiring founders and small businesses a few years ago, he anticipated that he would get mostly tough technology questions, but instead, he more often hears things like “Where do I start?”  
  2. A wealth of books are available to address the basic facts of business life, like the classic by Bill McBean — aptly named The Facts of Business Life — based on his 40 years’ experience running large and small businesses. Bill does a great job of outlining the key realities as follows: if you don’t lead, no one will follow; protecting your company’s assets must be your first priority; planning is about preparing for the future, not predicting it; if you don’t market your business, you won’t have one; The marketplace is a war zone; and you don’t just have to know the business you’re in, you have to know business.

Full Article

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Topics:  Startups, Entrepreneurship, Starting a business, Leadership, Failure

Crack the Chicken-and-Egg Dilemma — How Startups Can Thrive Against the Odds

By Arian Adeli | Edited by Micah Zimmerman | September 18, 2024

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2 key takeaways from the article

  1. In the high-stakes world of startups, founders often find themselves facing a paradoxical challenge: how to attract buyers without sellers and sellers without buyers.  This chicken-and-egg problem has derailed more promising startups than we care to count. The truth is, you can overcome this dilemma. Successful marketplaces like Airbnb, Uber and Etsy have already achieved this by creatively laser-focusing on one side of the market before moving on to the other.
  2. Solving the chicken-and-egg problem in marketplace startups is no small feat. It requires creativity, persistence and a willingness to experiment. By focusing on one side first, manually curating initial offerings, leveraging existing networks, creating exclusivity, offering irresistible incentives, designing for viral growth and b uilding credibility, you can overcome this hurdle and set your marketplace on the path to success.

Full Article

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Topics:  Startups, Entrepreneurship, piggybacking strategy, Trust