Search
Home arrow Online Shop
Snagging Shop
Make sure you find all
the defects in your
new home. Purchase
our snagging guide.
Snagging Guide
Reviews
Get a professional
snagger to create a
snag list for your new
property in the UK or Ireland.
Snagging Inspections
Main Menu
Home
New Homes News
Snagging Stories
New Homes Research
Snagging Forum
Snagging Cloud
Snagging Top Ten
Web Links
Snagging Photos
Property Books
Online Shop
Polls
Press
 
Login for Download
Contact us
 
Site Map
New Build Inspections
The leading truly independent snagging company.

UK: Snagging
Ireland: Snag List
Money Supermarket.com
Cheap Home Insurance and Compare Mortgages at Moneysupermarket.com
HIPS Directory
Find HIPS Providers in your local area using the HIP Central Home Information Pack Directory
Property Links

Investment Property
Let Choices help you find investment property.

Bermondsey Property
Search for Bermondsey Property in London. Hot Property has thousand of properties for sale in Bermondsey and property throughout the UK

Offplan Property
Are you looking for offplan property? Attend an inexpensive property seminar and get expert advice on property investment.

Walthamstow Flats
Find a Walthamstow Flat with Hot Property. We have over 95 thousand houses and flats on our database, including flats in Walthamstow

Parking in London
Think it's impossible? Find parking in London. More information at Gumtree.


 
Advertisement

Business at the Speed of Thought: Succeeding in the Digital Economy (Penguin Business Library)

Snagging.org In association with Amazon.co.uk

Online Shop | Property Guides |  Kitchen & Home |  Garden Tools |  Power Tools |  Consumer Electronics

Get the Snagging Checklist Here!


  



Business at the Speed of Thought: Succeeding in the Digital Economy (Penguin Business Library)
by: Bill Gates, Collins Hemingway

 : Business at the Speed of Thought: Succeeding in the Digital Economy (Penguin Business Library)

List Price: £12.99
Amazon.co.uk's Price: £9.09
You Save: £3.90 (30%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours



This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 658
EAN: 9780140283129
Edition: New Ed
ISBN: 0140283129
Label: Penguin
Manufacturer: Penguin
Number Of Pages: 560
Publication Date: May 25, 2000
Publisher: Penguin
Studio: Penguin




Related Items:

Editorial Review:

Amazon.co.uk Review:
So where do you want to go tomorrow? That's the question Bill Gates tries to answer in Business @ the Speed of Thought. Gates offers a 12-step programme for companies wanting to do business in the next millennium. The book's premise: Thanks to technology, the speed of business is accelerating at an ever-increasing rate and to survive, it must develop an infrastructure--a "digital nervous system"--that allows for the unfettered movement of information inside a company. Gates writes: "The most meaningful way to differentiate your company from your competition ... is to do an outstanding job with information. How you gather, manage and use information will determine whether you win or lose."

The book is peppered with examples of companies that have already successfully engineered information networks to manage inventory, sales, and customer relationships better. The examples run from Coca-Cola's ability to download sales data from vending machines to Microsoft's own internal practices, such as its reliance on e-mail for company-wide communication and the conversion of most paper processes to digital ones (an assertion that seems somewhat at odds with the now-infamous "by hand on sheets of paper" method of tracking profits that was revealed during Microsoft's antitrust trial).

While Gates breaks no new ground--dozens of authors have been writing about competing on a digital playing field for some time, among them Carl Shapiro and Hal Varian in Information Rules and Patricia Seybold in Customers.com--businesses that want a wakeup call may find this book a ringer. With excerpts in Time magazine, a dedicated Web site and an all-out media assault, Microsoft is working hard to push Business @ the Speed of Thought into the international dialogue and for many it will be difficult to see the book as anything but a finely tuned marketing campaign for the forthcoming versions of Windows NT and MS Office. Nevertheless, as Gates has shown time and time again, he, Microsoft, and perhaps even this book you may ignore at your own peril. --Harry C. Edwards, Amazon.com



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Sharing Is Good, But What Should Be Shared?
One of the primary benefits of a human nervous system is to allow the senses and the mind to be in close contact. This is most helpful to alerting us to opportunities and dangers so we respond more quickly.

When the nervous sytem is working well, this is great. Disease can cause these signals to be scrambled, and the individual fares poorly.

In this book, Mr. Gates argues persuasively for having a digital counterpart to the human nervous system. What he fails to focus on enough is how to identify what data to capture, how to turn data into knowledge, and how to turn knowledge into timely action.

For those subjects, you'll have to read Bill Jensen's book on Simplicity. If you only have time to read one or the other, I suggest Simplicity over Business @ the Speed of Thought.

The wired world easily overwhelms. Timely e-mails can turn into hundreds of e-mails. Data can turn into overwhelming quantities of confusion. Without the skills and tools to do data mining, the digital nervous sytem may just make things worse. Think about it.

A reason for being concerned about this point is the history of Microsoft itself, usually having to buy or copy innovations by others to advance its technology . . . usually arriving after targeted dates with software that crashes all the time . . . usually arriving with software that is so filled with unecessary features that it runs more slowly than typewriters did in the predigital age.

My sense from a recent site visit to Dell Computer is that Dell is far ahead of Microsoft in communicating and acting on information. I suggest you read Direct from Dell instead of this book if you only have time to read two books.

From a man who is supposed to be a great visionary of technology, I was quite disappointed in this book. I only saw a flawed vision that was more backward looking than forward looking.

This book wasn't timely when it came out . . . and time hasn't been good to its message.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Time for Business to get into IT
I found this book very useful in explaining the way that IT can be applied by businesses, large and small.

Although much of the information contained in the book is well recognised within the IT industry, the message still hasn't hit home for many business owners and managers.

Working in systems development, I still find that senior managers barely have a grasp of IT at all, let alone how it is going to shape their industry.

The message from this book is very timely, and is directed at the right audience. The limiting factor in business today is not IT, but people's ability to exploit it. I think that this has been true for a long time now !



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent overview to ensure business embraces technology
This book provides an excellent overview of how a business needs to adapt its internal business systems to survive, adapt and embrace the latest technology. It is written in a non-technical way which makes it ideal for non IT managers.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Can the World's Foremost Copier Be a Visionary?
Microsoft is renowned for watching trends, finding the best provider of new ideas and services, and buying/copying that innovation. You might call the company, the world's greatest fast follower. With the tremendous market power of its installed base of Windows, the company has moved profitably in a lot of new directions. IBM did the same before the Justice Department made the company allow anyone to use its operating sytem at modest cost. IBM also made lots of money. Was IBM a visionary company at the time? Absolutely not. Does Microsoft's success mean that it is a visionary company now? Probably not. For example, Gate's view of a paperless, electronic world proved to be a real problem during the company's recent antitrust trial with the U.S. government. Electronic records of aggressive behavior and intent kept showing up to contradict Gate's live testimony. Also remember that Gates thought the Internet was a nonstarter until quite recently, when it began its come-from-behind charge against Netscape. Specifically, the weakness of the vision is that it makes a company likely to be too internally focused. You can communicate so well with one another that you do not communicate so well with the customers and others who are important to you. I personally found the vision of Direct from Dell and Customer.com to be much more relevant. Read this book with caution, but do read it because we all need to know where Microsoft plans to take us. We'll have to go there anyway, to some extent.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - This book is a must to get the grey matter working
For the budding entrepreneur or business man this is a must. All CEOs,directors should have it as a bible.




Try searching the Internet for "Business at the Speed of Thought: Succeeding in the Digital Economy (Penguin Business Library)" or Ebay for "Business at the Speed of Thought: Succeeding in the Digital Economy (Penguin Business Library)".

 

You might also be interested in the following great products:

Latest Tags


Popular Tags


  
Snagging List

Generated in 5.03744 Seconds