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Podcasts: Listen To The Experts On Business Innovation


Posted by Mitch Wagner, Nov 27, 2006 08:31 PM

Innovation isn't just a matter of luck -- you don't have to stand around and wait for lightning to strike -- innovation can be built into the organization, business processes, and IT. Listen to our eight-part podcast series on business innovation to find out how, including connecting with customers and partners for innovation, managing information, making IT an innovation enabler, and more.


Here's what you'll hear:

David Stodder, editor-in-chief of Intelligent Enterprise, looks at how companies can use software to collaborate on innovation with partners, and make it repeatable.

Michael Biddick, author of Autonomic Computing: Vision vs. Reality, looks at how autonomics can help the business serve customers, and offers tips on getting started.

Best-selling author Patricia Seybold describes how customers design a company's future. She offers advice on how you can work with your smartest customers to innovate, and provides examples from big and small companies.

InformationWeek interviews Barry Libenson, CIO of Ingersoll Rand, about the company's Business Operating System initiative, challenges of implementing a new global IT process, how a new process changes the organization.

Stodder's back again with an interview with expert Stewart McKie about innovation management.

Eric Mankin, of Babson's Research Center on Innovation, describes how to make IT into an innovation enabler. That's what IT used to be, but now it's more of a barrier to innovation; here's how to get things back on track.

Network Computing columnist Frank Bulk talks about the vendors that can help you get your mobile application on the road, and whether e-mail is the killer app that will finally move mobile applications into the mainstream.

From milking parlors to middle schools, creative thinkers are bringing technology innovations to bear on unexpected fields. DeLaval's Joe Horkan and LaForche Parrish Schools' Chris Bowman discuss how innovative IT can make an organization better, healthier and more productive.

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