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The Innovator's Manifesto: Deliberate Disruption for Transformational Growth Hardcover – August 9, 2011

3.9 out of 5 stars 16 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Business (August 9, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385531664
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385531665
  • Product Dimensions: 5.8 x 1 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #344,527 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By Robert Morris HALL OF FAMETOP 500 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on August 10, 2011
Format: Hardcover
Frankly, I was unable to fully understand (much less appreciate) the significance of what Joseph A. Schumpeter shares in his masterwork, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, when I first read it in 1975. Only much later, after several re-readings, have I begun to "get it" in terms of what "creative destruction" is and isn't. I mention all this by way of introducing my gratitude to Michael E. Raynor for what I have learned from him in The Innovator's Manifesto as well as from books written or co-authored by Clayton Christensen, who wrote the Foreword to this book. For me, one of the most valuable "lessons" is that "creative destruction" is the means and "creative creation" is the ultimate objective. Whereas Charles Darwin explains evolution as a process of natural adaptation and elimination, what Raynor examines in this book are deliberate efforts to survive and then thrive. He asserts, and I agree, that "deliberate disruption" is the key to "transformational growth" by both individuals and organizations.

As he explains, "The first objective of this book is to demonstrate that Disruption has true [begin italics] predictive power [end italics]...Second, I will make the case for Disruption's unique and superior [begin italics] explanatory power [end italics]...Finally, I will offer some thoughts on how one can go about [begin italics] applying [end italics] these concepts to greatest effect at the least expense.
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Format: Hardcover
Few authors of business theory are willing, or for that matter able, to test their theories in light of real world cases. The Innovator's Manifesto is the unique test of Disruption Theory. This is Michael Raynor's analysis of the predictive ability of Disruptive Theory for selecting the winners or losers. He does this in a clever way - using a known sampling of businesses that were started by Intel and that had run their course. He then provides the results of MBA student predictions for these same businesses, before and after learning Disruption Theory, to demonstrate the improvement over chance in picking winners. While the results are intriguing, they are not stellar. Nevertheless it is the rest of the book that is enlightening as he discusses Disruption Theory and its application. He presents cases for more detailed consideration of whether these businesses are in fact disruptive or sustaining business models. So while I have read both prior Disruption books from Clayton, Michael better brings to life what is and what is not a Disruptive play - details that are enlightening to anyone wanting to better understand how the principals can be better applied and understood. So if you want to hone your skill at picking business winners, or understand Disruptive Theory better...this is the book.
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Format: Hardcover
In "The Innovator's Manifesto," Author Michael Raynor builds upon his previous body of work on innovation and upon groundbreaking research done at Intel to give us an empirical way to improve predictive accuracy and survival rates for early stage business models. The difference between Raynor and the conventional mindset is a shift from relying on intuitive pattern-recognition and that of a company's commercialization team to the application of Disruption, following explicit rules observed and presented by the author. Extensive data, analyses, and case studies (retrospective and prospective) are presented to bolster "The Innovator's Manifesto," but may not be satisfying to all.

As with Clayton Christensen's "Innovator's Dilemma," I found this book to be another "ah ha" experience as Raynor captures and provides structure to a process I have used for years when evaluating young companies, a process that was learned not taught. Now, others will be able to apply what took me years to learn without any lengthy apprenticeship or black magic, and dramatically increase their odds of success by applying Raynor's rules-based approach correctly.

Raynor admits that Disruption often turns on luck but it does so within certain "laws," and "for those who understand those laws, it is possible to influence materially, when and how much luck will strike... when it comes to Disruption, as with so much else, it is possible to make your own luck."
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Format: Hardcover
I was given this book as a gift, and could not have--in a million years of planning--gotten a better book relevant to OccupyWallStreet (OWS)than this book. I read it this morning while my MGB was in the shop recovering from my trip to NYC OWS 6-7 October (shredded the generator). Halfway through my notes, advanced here, I observe that the book is a pleasure to read and a substantial advance on the earlier disruption explorations.

While I sympathize with those who do not "get" this book and downgrade it, I gave it a solid five and seriously considered a six star plus (only 10% of my reviews go there) but kept it at five because any book that considers Walmart disruptive (which it is) without observing the "true cost" to society, the environment, government, and small businesses, is completely missing the big picture.

This book does go beyond the earlier book that I have also reviewed, The Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary Book That Will Change the Way You Do Business, and while Clayton M. Christensen has been churning books out with variations on the theme, I do see in this book very important, useful, immediately applicable insights and would recommend buying the first Christensen book and this book (to which he writes a Foreword).
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