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From the Editor's Desk
Avoiding Disruption Requires Rapid Decision Making
To thwart possible disruption, pundits give legacy companies such advice as "disrupt yourself before you get disrupted" or "put frontline employees in charge of strategy and execution." This counsel is of little help. Military history offers a much better way to respond. We call it tempo-based competition.
In 1976, U.S. Air Force Col. John Boyd explained why American fighter pilots had a far higher "kill ratio" (10:1) than opponents in the Korean War. At the time, the commonly held belief was that U.S. pilots were much better trained. If this was true, then dogfight victories should have been evenly distributed among all U.S. pilots. They were not; a few pilots achieved most of the kills while the others had very few, none, or were shot down themselves.
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97.5 percent of broadband connections in India meet TRAI's 2Mbps speed threshold: OoklaOver 97.5 percent of fixed broadband connections in India meet the 2Mbps speed threshold recommended by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) earlier this month, telecom network intelligence firm Ookla said on Thursday. The regulator proposed to revise the minimum broadband speed to 2Mbps from 512Kbps. Ookla stated that the revision didn’t shift the […]
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