Reinventing Your Business After Corona Virus
The business has changed, perhaps forever, due to the coronavirus. Let’s admit the obvious disruptions to existing businesses: supply chains are missing a link; company owners have little cash on hand; employees are eager but scared; consumer confidence is low except for staple products and services, and consumer habits have shifted to online-only channels. Once we emerge from this crisis, business managers can reinvent their product offerings to survive in the post-coronavirus economy in four steps. At the heart of this method is evidence-based decision-making. |
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Objectives |
Businesses are a collection of projects. Reinventing a business requires that each project be reconsidered, with decisions based on evidence. |
Who should attend |
Project managers, business unit managers, entrepreneurs, student |
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What to cover |
What are the vital steps for reinventing a business? |
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PDU's: |
1 PDUs (Strategic: 1) |
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER: |
Ted Ladd is the Dean of Research and Professor of Entrepreneurship at Hult International Business School, specializing in the methods used by entrepreneurs to construct successful business models for high-tech start-ups. Ted holds a Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve, an MBA from Wharton, a master's in international economics with honors from Johns Hopkins University, and a BA cum laude with distinction from Cornell as a triple major in biology, government, and technical sociology. Ted has founded, led and participated in several venture-backed high-tech start-up ventures. Most recently, he was the Director of Ecosystems at WIMM Labs, which pioneered wearable consumer computing devices (i.e. smartwatches) and was subsequently purchased by Google. He serves on the boards of several public, private, and non-profit boards for energy generation and economic development in his home state of Wyoming. Ted is also an instructor at Harvard University. He has been a Visiting Professor at the Copenhagen Business School, a member of the core faculty at the Bainbridge Graduate Institute (Seattle) and an entrepreneurship mentor at Stanford University (Palo Alto). His work has appeared in the Harvard Business Review, the Stanford Social Innovation Review, several academic journals and the annual conferences of the Academy of Management, USASBE, Net Impact, and Ashoka. He was named a fellow at the Fowler Center for Sustainable Value at Case Western and received several grants from the U.S. National Science Foundation. |
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Cancellation and No-Show Policy: If you have made a reservation and find that you will be unable to attend, please send an email to Jelena Durovic cfo@pmisfbac.org and cancel your ticket as early as possible. All cancellations are subject to a minimum of $5.00 fee during the early bird. Cancellations after Early Bird duration are subject to full charge to ensure the Chapter does not incur excessive expenses. |
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