In addition to writing bestselling books (The Digital Economy, Growing Up Digital, and Paradigm Shift), Don Tapscott is chairman of the Alliance for Converging Technologies, an organization with a "focus on competitive advantage in the digital economy," whose members include companies such as the Bank of Montreal Canada, Federal Express, General Motors, and Xerox. For Blueprint to the Digital Economy, Tapscott puts on an editor's hat and, along with Alex Lowy and David Ticoll, presents a collection of 20 articles that speak to all aspects of doing business in the digital age. The articles, written by members of the alliance, cover a wide range of topics from business design at GM and the role of banking in the digital economy to creating communities in cyberspace and the role of government in the networked world. The real strength of books in this genre is not their writing and presentation, which tend to be uneven, but rather the breadth of experience and perspective they communicate. And experience and perspective is something that this book has in spades. If you're at all interested in how business today is positioning itself for tomorrow, then Blueprint to the Digital Economy is definitely worth a look. --Harry C. Edwards
Review
"Tapscott's Blueprint to the Digital Economy is a "must read" for all organizations jockeying for position within the fabric of the new economy. As we continue to face the challenges of the changing landscape of competition, industry and infrastructure, Blueprint provides the most insightful examination of today's -- and tomorrow's market realities I've read yet." -- George T. Shaheen, Managing Partner & CEO Andersen Consulting
"Tapscott's editing team takes the reader along the path described in his earlier book, The Digital Economy. This collection of firsthand experiences from those most affected by digital convergence, is captivating reading. Blueprint provides concrete illustrations of how technology is creating a truly new economy. -- Dr. Klaus Schwab, President, World Economic Forum
If you want to know what's really required to play the digital game, you'll find genuine value in this book. Digital technology has streamlined the handling of virtually all content - numbers, words, sounds, pictures. The possibilities seem infinite. But turning concepts into profits demands rigorous thought and arduous work. By asking hard questions of the smartest people around, Don Tapscott has compiled blueprints that are already transforming products, markets, lives. -- George M.C. Fisher, Chairman and CEO, Eastman Kodak Company
Smart Web architects study effective business models. But where to look among the sea of competing case studies? Don Tapscott, the bestselling author of The Digital Economy, has asked members of the Alliance for Converging Technologies to separate the wheat from the chaff.
In a series of articles authored by ACT members, Blueprint to the Digital Economy lays out the rules of the new economic landscape, examines how industries have changed as a result of the digital revolution and explores the ramifications of Internet-enabled enterprise. Unlike Michael Wolff_s Burn Rate, which chronicles one company_s misfortune, Blueprint offers an action-oriented, insider look into companies that have hit upon successful business formulas.
It_s also a chance for corporate bigwigs to recount their battles and look into their crystal balls. Some senior execs seem keen on touting their savvy business moves and altruism (Raymond J. Lane, president and COO of Oracle boasts that his company wired George Washington Carver Middle School in South Central Los Angeles), but the authors mostly offer useful case studies. GeoPartners_ James Moore recounts how Eric Schmidt and John Herr leveraged the capabilities of the Internet to effectively market Java, which had begun as a research tool. Two Bell execs explain how empowering the customer can benefit the company, Carl E. Gustin shares Kodak_s strategies for accommodating new technologies and Lloyd Darlington discusses how Bank of Montreal has adapted to e-business. And just about everyone describes a vision of the next killer app.
While the book has a predominantly optimistic tone, some of the contributors mix in a healthy dose of skepticism. Lane thinks we_ll enter an information age only when access to information is simple and low-cost probably in the new millennium. And Internet architect Vint Cerf warns that the Net is not a utopia but a reflection of the real world. He suggests ways to develop national and international security policies to prevent widespread Internet fraud.
We are bombarded by information these days, but knowledge remains an elusive commodity. Blueprint offers lessons from the likes of GM, IBM and HP, but as the authors imply, it_s up to you to navigate the landscape of the emerging _Internetworked Economy._
Diane Anderson -- From The Industry Standard
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