The Search for Survival: Lessons from Disruptive Technologies
By (Author) Henry C. Lucas Jr.
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
6th June 2012
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
338/.064
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
652g
Ideal for business students, business managers, and corporate senior executives, this book distills the lessons learned from the disasters that have befallen companies that were unable to cope with disruptive technologies. In recent decades, technology has changed rapidly to the point that it can very quickly affect a seemingly impregnable company or industry. Unexpected technological developments enable innovators to offer new products and services that threaten incumbents. In order to survive, existing firms must be able to see a disruption on the horizon and figure out how to respond. The Search for Survival: Lessons from Disruptive Technologies examines organizations that failed to develop a strategy for coping with a technological disruption and have suffered greatly or even gone out of business. The first chapter presents a model of how firms can respond to and hopefully survive a disruptive technology. Each following chapter focuses on firms that have failed to survive or whose future is in doubt, accompanied by an extensive, detailed discussion of the lessons learned from each company or field's failings, covering examples from industries such as recorded music, book publishing, video, newspaper, and higher education.
Henry C. Lucas, Jr., PhD, is Robert H. Smith Professor of Information systems at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland. He has previously been on the faculty at New York University and Stanford University. He obtained his bachelor's degree from Yale University and his master's degree and doctorate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His published works include Praeger's Inside the Future: Surviving the Technology Revolution and Beware the Winner's Curse: Victories that Can Sink You and Your Company.