Strategy

Monitor has deep roots in strategy. One of our founders, Professor Michael Porter of Harvard Business School, literally wrote the book (actually, several books) on strategy.

Our strategy work now covers a broad range of issues: business-unit and corporate strategy; portfolio management; strategic vision, mission and values development; strategic planning processes and approaches; managing uncertainty and risk; and competitive dynamics and game theory.

Much of our corporate strategy work also involves corporate finance, corporate development, mergers and acquisitions advisory, and post-merger integration.

Virtually all Monitor work with clients involves strategy, since it provides an essential context for other decisions and actions. Over 25 years, we feel we have developed the world's most thorough understanding of the practical application of strategic thinking to drive lasting impact.

Innovation Lessons from Kodak’s Failures

Larry Keeley January 18, 2012 Article

Larry Keeley, an innovation expert and partner at Monitor, explains how Kodak’s famous failure to enter digital photography quickly can be a useful lesson for executives looking to innovate now. He writes that a new form of strategic thinking, convergences, “gives leaders a deeper sense of the interdependencies that connect firms, products, systems and services in new ecosystems” and reveals emerging opportunities, typically at the junction of new technologies and customer behaviors.

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China’s Future in Bioscience

George Baeder December 13, 2011 Article

With sizable government support, China’s life sciences industry “is quietly gathering a critical mass of skilled talent, and savvy and focused venture investors,” writes Monitor’s George Baeder in the December 2011 issue of Pharmaceutical Executive magazine.

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Private Equity In the Shadow of Giants: Innovative Approaches Along the Investment Value Chain in Sub-Saharan Africa

Christoph Andrykowsky, Victoria Barbary, and Olivia Toye December 1, 2011 Article

This report, "Private Equity In the Shadow of Giants: Innovative Approaches Along the Investment Value Chain in Sub-Saharan Africa," surveys a wide range of stakeholders in the African private equity ecosystem to help new-to-Africa actors interested in understanding in more detail the investment opportunities and nuances in the operating models on the Sub-continent. It was compiled in the second half of 2011, triggered by the recent increase in positive hype that Africa received as the last frontier market. The report covers trends and innovative approaches from fund strategies and fundraising, to deal-flow generation and post-deal value-add activities, and ultimately exits. Overall, it uncovered an attractive industry in flux, with increased competitiveness, but sufficient uncharted territory to grow from its still relatively small base.

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Transforming Commercial Models to Address New Health Care Realities

Jeff Wordham and Sheryl L. Jacobson November 8, 2011 Article

Fundamental changes in the health care system are transforming how key stakeholders value, obtain, and process information. While biopharmaceutical companies are experimenting with different solutions, they are not going far enough and fast enough to address new realities. In this article, part of the Monitor Perspectives white paper series, Jeff Wordham and Sheryl L. Jacobson outline how companies can succeed by fundamentally rethinking their approaches to customers, offering and channels.

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Transforming Customer Experiences—How Pharmaceutical Companies Can Deliver Greater Value to Customers: Video Highlights

Dr. Wendy Dixon, David Hole, Sheryl Jacobson and Jeff Wordham October 21, 2011 Article

In these video clips, Monitor thought leaders explain why pharmaceutical companies need to think differently about their commercial models—their approaches to customers, offerings, and channels—to make important changes to their strategies and adapt to the new shape of the pharmaceutical industry.

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Winners and Losers in the New Commodity Price Regime

Peter Schwartz, et al. July 11, 2011 Article

This white paper by experts from Monitor and Global Business Network (GBN) analyzes the impact that deep structural shifts in commodities markets will have on the competitive landscape, including the critical supply chain and business location decisions C-level executives will face as higher prices for food, fuel and minerals become permanent.

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Learnings from the Long View

Peter Schwartz June 8, 2011 Article

The Art of the Long View, Peter Schwartz’s seminal book on scenario planning, is required reading at business schools across the country. Now, two decades later, Schwartz—a partner at Monitor and the chairman and co-founder of Monitor’s Global Business Network (GBN) —revisits the lessons from the book and shares what he has learned since then.

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Delivering Measurable Results: The Path to Profit Improvement

Robert Browne, Josh Lee, Mike Standing and Lisa S. Thompson May 17, 2011 Article

Many companies experience cycles in which revenue growth and cost cutting alternate in focus. While these cycles are understandable, they often damage long-term profitability. In this article, Monitor's Robert Browne, Josh Lee, Mike Standing and Lisa S. Thompson present the Delivering Measurable Results approach, which helps firms escape these cycles of revenue growth and cost cutting by developing programs that can sustainably improve their margins.

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Profit in the Cloud: VAR Economics & Office 365

Steven Pickle, Joseph Fowler and John Collins April 21, 2011 Article

For this report, Microsoft asked Monitor Group to look specifically at what it takes for value-added resellers (VARs) in the information technology industry to excel with cloud offerings, particularly with one of Microsoft’s newest cloud services, Office 365.

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Growth at Work: The Benefits of Building Entrepreneurial Environments

Francesco Fazio, Joel Finlayson and Neil Pearse March 28, 2011 Article

The benefits of having an entrepreneurial culture are clear—it leads to more effective and loyal employees, higher levels of innovation, and faster reaction times, just to name a few. But entrepreneurial environments aren’t just for small start-ups in new markets—even large companies in existing business sectors can create an entrepreneurial environment by employing five key enablers, explain Monitor’s Francesco Fazio, Joel Finlayson and Neil Pearse in this article.

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