About Us Author Customer Care Higher Education Professional School English Language Teaching
 
Home Site Map
Let Us Find Your Title: Search    
Search By Discipline    
Sign Up for Information 
Communities
Browse All products by Subject
Highlights

Our Brands
McGraw-Hill's AccessMedicine
Harrison's
DeMYSTiFied
Oracle Press
Osborne
Open University Press
Schaum's Outlines
teach yourself
Lange
International Marine
First Aid

Related Links

MHE Home > Professional, Trade & Medical > Book Review - Business & General Reference
Book Review
Rapid Transformation
Greater Good Authors: Behnam Tabrizi
ISBN-13:
ISBN-10:
©2008 | 1st Edition | 336 pages , Hardcover, Harvard Business Press
Reviewed by: Shanghai Daily
Publication Issue Date: 15-16 March 2008

How to turn on a dime, make a change

THE ability to make changes, even fundamental transformations, quickly and effectively is a vital survival skill in the business jungle.

As Behnam N. Tabrizi, the author of “Rapid Transformation? observes, “The organizations that can most quickly respond to the marketplace, particularly those that adapt faster than their competitors, are the ones that make it to the top.?

The miraculous survival of Apple Computer, Inc in the 1997 crisis illustrates. That year, when Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, who was thrown out of the company in 1985, returned to the company, Apple was on the brink of bankruptcy.

No sooner had Jobs regained de facto control than he undertook a fundamental transformation. He reduced research and development divisions from 50 to 10. He shifted direction and reoriented the company towards the rapidly developing home computer market instead of the business computer market. He launched iMac, the home computer that became highly successful.

The structural changes were carried out within several months and, with a series of other marketing strategies and innovative campaigns, Apple was brought back on track.

Apple’s revival, as Tabrizi sees it, lies in its “all-encompassing, fast, integrative? transformation. By cit ing real-world examples from other companies, including Hewlett- Packard, Nissan, and VeriSign, he argues persuasively for the importance of rapid and successful business transformation.

Despite the subtitle, “A 90-Day Plan for Fast and Effective Change,?the author doesn’t believe companies can complete organizational transformation within only three months. Rather, it offers a way for companies to draw up a plan for fast and effective transformational change within 90 days. That’s not easy either. Tabrizi emphasizes extensive preparation before a change.

The preparation phase, or “pretransformation?period, as Tabrizi calls it, usually lasts for one to three months. During this period, it is important for leaders of the change initiative to effectively communicate the driving need for change among all employees, not just leaders at high levels. Tabrizi separates the 90- day plan into three 30-day stages: diagnosing needs, envisioning the future, and “paving the road?to change.

The third stage is likely to be the most interesting to organizations. Having finished the first two stages, defining organizational needs and identifying feasible solutions, it’s time to plan how to announce its transformation. This is essential as the evaluation of a company’s successful transformation depends largely on public acceptance.

A company’s earlier troubles may have tainted its image. So it’s a critical moment to restore public faith. The book may give the illusion that managing a major change of a company is not as difficult as it has been supposed. That’s obviously untrue. Yet it at least offers a helpful alternative for leaders who are guiding an organizational change.

--Wu Jiayin

Sign-up for Alerts
News & Events
 
Book Reviews
Best Sellers
 
New Titles
 
Downloads
Rep Locator
Related Sites