This is a profound perspective, it's the agency problem at work, and the alignment of incentives. Incentives still remain the greatest predictor of human actions
If the startup can successfully do it, yes. But if a company refuses to digitize, for instance, the startup isn't even in a position to win. The incentives must be carefully designed so that 'everyone' can win.
This is a profound perspective, it's the agency problem at work, and the alignment of incentives. Incentives still remain the greatest predictor of human actions
Gbam!
This is what I wish every product leader knew.
Disrupting a market has always been synonymous with some sort of speed…does finding and replacing this persistent and
‘engineered’ delay mean the startup is doing something right?
If the startup can successfully do it, yes. But if a company refuses to digitize, for instance, the startup isn't even in a position to win. The incentives must be carefully designed so that 'everyone' can win.