Europe

Monitor has an extensive history of client work in all parts of Europe, from Turkey to Scandinavia and Russia to Portugal. Our work with corporations and governments in the region helps us gain insight into many of the critical factors that affect how our clients pursue their strategies in Europe. These factors include: impact of labor market inflexibilities; impact of a new influx of EU members; lessons to be learned from the remarkable growth of technology companies in certain Scandinavian and Baltic countries; impact of continued immigration into Europe, and the national governments' attempts to manage it; and the requirement for, and likely outcomes of, various types of regulatory reform.

Growth in a Low Growth Economy

Eamonn Kelly and Steven Weber May 3, 2012 Article

If the arrival of a more robust global economic recovery and a return to familiar growth patterns is not in our medium term future, what can Western enterprises do now to enhance their competitiveness and find growth opportunities in a low growth environment? Monitor’s Eamonn Kelly and UC Berkeley’s Steven Weber argue that the process of ‘recovery’ from the Great Recession, still in the early stages of what will be a drawn-out low growth period, will serve to reinforce and accelerate major shifts in patterns of consumption, and foundational elements of the global business environment. Western firms sitting on record reserves of cash appear to be waiting for uncertainty to ‘resolve’—but what may seem like a prudent risk management strategy is actually itself risky. Kelly and Weber analyze the new dynamics of consumption, the new role of governments, and other major features of the emerging global economy, and point to opportunities to secure a disproportionate share of growth in the near term and competitive advantage for the long term.

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Help Wanted 2.0: Engaging Others To Tackle Wicked Problems

Bansi Nagj and Helen Walters April 30, 2012 Article

From climate change to spiraling healthcare costs, from global poverty to food and water shortages, wicked problems and their ramifications also impact organizations and their employees. The key to solving these complex problems – as well as narrower, more industry-specific challenges – lies in figuring out when – and whom – to ask for help. In this article for Rotman Magazine, Bansi Nagji and Helen Walters outline various approaches to think both systematically and strategically about open innovation and new ways to get others to help solve complex problems.

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Managing Your Innovation Portfolio

Bansi Nagji and Geoff Tuff April 19, 2012 Article

In this Harvard Business Review lead feature article, Bansi Nagji and Geoff Tuff of Monitor make the compelling argument that organizations should manage for "Total Innovation." A carefully balanced innovation portfolio is important for long-term, sustained growth; it helps companies outperform their competitors and potentially achieve a premium recognized by the capital markets.

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Embracing Complexity: Building Innovation Capabilities for Your Organization

Geoff Tuff, Amelia Dunlop, Brian Quinn and Helen Walters March 21, 2012 Video

In this recording of Monitor’s recent webcast, "Embracing Complexity: Building Innovation Capabilities for Your Organization" Monitor thought leaders discuss how to frame growth challenges holistically. They detail practical methods to develop more systematic and structured approaches to innovation. Watch this webcast to glean new insights on how to build both the robust structures and the internal systems to provide reliable, repeatable growth and innovation.

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Dynamic Strategy Implementation: Delivering on Your Strategic Ambition

Amelia Dunlop, Vincent Firth, and Robert Lurie March 7, 2012 Article

Most strategies fail in the implementation phase, and the problem can be traced to three factors: a failure of translation, a failure of adaptation, and a failure to sustain change over the long term. Amelia Dunlop, Vincent Firth, and Robert Lurie discuss key elements of a dynamic approach to strategy implementation—one that overcomes the limitations of traditional approaches—and how it has helped leading enterprises deliver more effectively on their strategic ambition in this paper from the Monitor Perspectives series.

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Bridging the Gap: The Business Case for Financial Capability

Anamitra Deb and Mike Kubzansky March 5, 2012 Article

Between 500 million and 800 million of the world’s poor now have access to finance—but only one in four have been taught how to use their access wisely and to their advantage. In this study commissioned by the Citi Foundation, Monitor’s Anamitra Deb and Mike Kubzansky survey the landscape of old and new financial education models, analyze whether they have a business case and make recommendations on a shared agenda for the field to benefit all financial inclusion stakeholders—including consumers, financial institutions, policy makers and donors, and educators.

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Mining in Africa: How Inclusive Solutions Can Mitigate Risk

Andrew Lane and Riccardo Reggio February 8, 2012 Article

Mining companies looking to do business in Africa should take an inclusive approach to development that addresses the needs of the relevant governments, communities in which they operate, and the companies own needs, write Andrew Lane and Riccardo Reggio in this article from the Monitor Perspectives series.

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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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Scenario Thinking Applied to the Global Economic Outlook

Peter Schwartz, Jonathan Star, Nikhil Prasad Ojha December 31, 2011 Article

The global economy faces serious risks of a second “great recession” if world leaders fail to cooperate on solutions to prevent “near-term economic divisions to devolve into deeper-seated geopolitical divisions,” write Peter Schwartz, Jonathan Star, and Nikhil Prasad Ojha in The Times of India newspaper. In this piece that demonstrates scenario thinking, the authors project the global economy is likely to go through a near-term period of low growth. The long-term prognosis then depends on the actions—or failures—of leaders to respond.

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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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