546: Driving company growth through ventures (with Linda Yates)

546: Driving company growth through ventures (with Linda Yates)

Welcome to an episode with Linda Yates, the founder and CEO of Mach49, the leading growth incubator for global businesses with clients including Goodyear, Hitachi, Intel, JetBlue, Nestlé Purina, Prudential and Shell.

In Linda's new book The Unicorn Within, she empowers large companies to beat startups at their own game—to build a pipeline and portfolio of new ventures to drive meaningful growth through teachable, repeatable, scalable method focused 100 percent on execution across the spectrum of venture creation from Ideate to Incubate, Accelerate, and Scale. She also offers keys to managing the Mothership and seizing the Mothership advantage to ensure your ventures reach escape velocity and thrive.

Linda Yate is a seasoned CEO with over 25 years of experience creating global strategy and driving innovation for large multinationals around the world. A native of Silicon Valley, Linda spent a decade as a member of the Board of Directors for NYSE-traded Sybase Inc. (now SAP) and has been a board member and advisor to many entrepreneurs and private companies. Linda was previously CEO of Strategos, pioneering the field of Corporate Innovation with Co-Founder and Chairman, Professor Gary Hamel. She is a Henry Crown Fellow with the Aspen Institute. She has been interviewed by Reid Hoffman for "Masters of Scale" and other programs.

Get Linda's book here:

The Unicorn Within: How Companies Can Create Game-Changing Ventures at Startup Speed. Linda Yates.

Enjoying this episode? Get access to sample advanced training episodes here: www.firmsconsulting.com/promo

Avsnitt(816)

220: Why Candidates Fail to Succeed

220: Why Candidates Fail to Succeed

This is an important and wide ranging podcast around the theme of why candidates fail and some key observations from Felix in The Consulting Offer Season 1.

5 Okt 201443min

219: Are Some Consulting Club Leaders Selfish?

219: Are Some Consulting Club Leaders Selfish?

The concept of a Management Consulting Club is great, but the execution leaves little to be desired. Very few clubs are actually run by presidents/executive council members who know anything about consulting, or worse, care about their members.

29 Sep 201415min

218: Ignoring partners in an interview

218: Ignoring partners in an interview

You have been brainwashed by every single forum and case book to assume that McKinsey wants a framework and set of hypotheses, that you have stopped listening as carefully to the interviewer and simply providing hypotheses even when the interview is not asking for them!

23 Sep 20149min

217: Women are their own worst enemies

217: Women are their own worst enemies

I want to talk about three incidences and what it says about how women think about themselves.

17 Sep 201424min

216: Choosing Boutique Firms over McKinsey

216: Choosing Boutique Firms over McKinsey

Choosing a boutique firm as one path into management consulting is a popular choice. While boutique consulting firm appear to operate like McKinsey and BCG, and may even be led by ex-partners, there business models typical mean they create overwhelmingly different experiences for their consultants.

11 Sep 201430min

215: How non-case problems impacted Rafik

215: How non-case problems impacted Rafik

Most aspiring management consultants will spend about 95% of their time focusing on the technical issues to fix their case performance. That is, they focus on hypotheses, frameworks, decision trees, structures and calculations. However, what if that is not the areas which will yield the greatest gains?

5 Sep 201412min

214: Why entrepreneurs always provide poor PEI answers

214: Why entrepreneurs always provide poor PEI answers

Entrepreneurs almost always fail to answer the most basic question: If you were so successful, why are you leaving behind all that success to apply for a ~$150K/annum package at McKinsey as an associate?

30 Aug 201411min

213: How Michael fixed a stuttering problem

213: How Michael fixed a stuttering problem

This podcast draws on the feedback of one of our principals, Michael Boricki who was a Big-3 principal and left the firm on the day after he was appointed director, to discuss the technique he used to not only fix a stuttering problem, but use the pain from fixing the problem to introduce broader, and much needed, flexibility in this communication techniques.

24 Aug 201414min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

framgangspodden
badfluence
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-svart-marknad
uppgang-och-fall
rss-borsens-finest
lastbilspodden
rss-dagen-med-di
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
affarsvarlden
fill-or-kill
avanzapodden
borsmorgon
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
rss-en-rik-historia
bathina-en-podcast
24fragor
market-makers
kvalitetsaktiepodden