Skip over secondary navigation

Secondary navigation

Skip over Content

Content

Blog Home

RSS Feed

rss feed RSS 2.0

Subscribe Using


Twitter
Twitter Profile | What is this?

Blog Search


Advanced Search

Categories

Tags

siemensPLM SiemensPLM siemensplm plmeurope08 PLMEurope08 PLM Synchronous Technology NX PLM_Europe Solid Edge CAD plmeurope plmconam08 teamcenter industrial_design Siemens PLM Software synchronous technology burhop Helmuth_Ludwig 3D Canadian manufacturing PLM_World Designfusion ASML Maarten_Romers Velocity Series 4-tier_arch ribbon bar Knowledge_Fusion microsoft KF product_configuration Femap teamcenter_express green OOTB smart_codes launch seminar tecnomatix

Most Recent

Older / Archives

Members:
Login | Register

Entries Tagged: Green

Greening the executive suite

Umair has a good post on the Harvard Business blog on the management DNA changes necessary for companies to really go green. What caught my attention was this excerpt:

They’re going to discover that the same principles of management are necessary to make companies green as those that we’ve been discussing at the edge: democratization, openness, transparency, love, and a fierce embrace of what’s good – to name just a few.

That's a pretty fundamental change and it's pretty clear that so far there are some companies that get it, some that are trying and some that need a little help.

The interesting thing is that these same requirements (democratization, openness, transparency) have been in place for companies looking to get an innovation advantage through product lifecycle management. Democratization because the best ideas can come from anywhere in the company, openness because best in class companies are able to operate in what Henry Chesbrough calls "Open Innovation" and transparency because using a PLM system in a silo consistently sub-optimizes results. So in the race to become green it will be interesting to watch and see if companies that have become innovation leaders through PLM are able to get to green sooner than the competition. If Umair is right in outlining the requirements, they seem to have all the skills mastered.




Context