1.

Record Nr.

UNISALENTO991002045919707536

Titolo

L'arte di guarire : aspetti della professione medica tra Medioevo ed eta contemporanea / a cura di Maria Luisa Betri e alessandro Pastore

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Bologna : CLUEB, [1993]

Descrizione fisica

208 p. ; 24 cm.

Altri autori (Persone)

Betri, Maria Luisa

Disciplina

610.695

Soggetti

Medici - Professione

Lingua di pubblicazione

Italiano

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910140624803321

Autore

Traitler Helmut

Titolo

The food industry innovation school : how to drive innovation through complex organizations / / Helmut Traitler

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Chichester, England : , : Wiley Blackwell, , 2015

©2015

ISBN

1-118-94766-5

1-118-94765-7

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (279 p.)

Disciplina

664.0068/4

Soggetti

Food industry and trade - Management

Organizational effectiveness

Food - Technological innovations

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Forewords; Acknowledgements; Part 1 Your company and the outside world; Chapter 1 Your world; 1.1



Introduction; 1.2 The workspace: heaven or hell?; 1.3 The outside world: is there someone?; 1.3.1 Peers inside your company; 1.3.2 Peers outside your company; 1.3.3 The bosses; 1.3.4 Media and the web, retailers and consumers, shareholders and analysts; 1.3.5 The ""outer shell"": family, friends, politics, public perception, macroeconomics; 1.4 The main players in your organization: hierarchies, attitudes, and platitudes

1.5 How to generate attention for your work, for your project 1.6 Summary; 1.7 Topics for further in-depth discussion;  add your own experience; Chapter 2 Projects and partners; 2.1 Everything's a project; 2.2 The eternal strategy; 2.3 The valuation of projects; 2.4 Aligning partners and sponsors; 2.5 Aligning with the strategy of the company; 2.6 What is a project?; 2.7 Summary; 2.8 Topics for further in-depth discussions;  add your own experience; Chapter 3 What makes them tick?; 3.1 Why do you need ""them"" to tick?; 3.2 It's a tough world out there: The Dragon's Den

3.3 How to sell in the most promising ways? 3.4 The optimal project mix; 3.5 Measuring success: a first glimpse; 3.6 Why success stories make them tick; 3.7 Summary; 3.8 Topics for further in-depth discussion;  add your own experience; Chapter 4 Keys to success; 4.1 The medium is the message; 4.2 Look beyond to the outside; 4.3 Taking risks, the right risks; 4.4 Building bridges; 4.5 Become street-smart and live it; 4.6 Summary; 4.7 Topics for further in-depth discussions;  add your own experience; Part 2 How to drive innovation into the marketplace and into the consumers' homes

Chapter 5 Innovation revisited 5.1 What do you mean by ""innovation""?; 5.2 Innovation in the food industry; 5.3 Creativity: the harbinger of innovation and invention; 5.4 How does innovative thinking travel across your company?; 5.5 Summary; 5.6 Topics for further in-depth discussions;  add your own experience; Chapter 6 How to become short-termishly long term; 6.1 The importance of sustainability in innovation; 6.2 Some term-inology; 6.3 Clever perseverance; 6.4 The short-term-long-term balance in the food industry; 6.5 Summary; 6.6 Topics for further in-depth discussions

add your own experience Chapter 7 Success measured; 7.1 Success Metrics 101; 7.2 The consumer in the equation; 7.3 The success rate: rate the success; 7.4 Success and you; 7.5 Summary; 7.6 Topics for further in-depth discussions;  add your own experience; Chapter 8 The value of success stories; 8.1 What counts is the well-packaged result; 8.2 The role of the success story: storytelling; 8.3 How to make your story; 8.4 Stories become contagious; 8.5 Summary; 8.6 Topics for further in-depth discussions;  add your own experience

Part 3 Most important key success factors for successful execution of innovation

Sommario/riassunto

Innovation and new product development are increasingly perceived as drivers of profits in the food industry. Companies are dedicating a large amount of resources to these areas and it is crucial that individuals understand how to be part of this new strategy.   The Food Industry Innovation School focuses on key skills needed to drive new ideas from initial concepts through to successful products on the shelf. The author argues that any individual can learn how to lead innovation within complex organizations utilizing companies' commercial and financial resources. The book focuses on the