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How Strategy Works in an Interconnected, Automated World Leaders already know that the classic approach to strategy--analyze, plan, execute--is losing relevance. But they don't yet know what replaces it. As everyone and everything becomes more interconnected and digitized, how do you operate, compete, and win? Ming Zeng, the former Chief of Staff and strategy adviser to Alibaba Group's founder Jack Ma, explains how the latest technological developments, such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, the mobile internet, and cloud computing are redefining how value is created. Written especially for those outside the technology industry or the startup arena, this book introduces a simple, overarching framework to guide strategy formulation and execution in this data-rich and highly interactive environment. Revealing the revolutionary practices that he and his team have developed at Alibaba, Zeng shows how to: Automate decisions through machine learning Create products informed by real-time data from customers Determine the right strategic positioning to maximize value from platforms and suppliers Repurpose your organization to further human insight and enable creativity Lead your company's transformation into a smart business With insights into the strategies and tools used by leaders at Alibaba and other companies such as Ruhan and Red Collar, in a variety of industries from furniture making to banking to custom tailoring, Smart Business outlines a radically new approach to strategy that can be applied everywhere. Review: Great book about Alibaba and the Chinese e-commerce - Itโs a really good book about Alibabaโs rise and interesting overview about the Chinese e-commerce situation and its turbulent development. Review: Your best investment!!! - This Harvard Business School book will make you wealthy !!! Put $20,000 in BABA now and maybe end up with $20 million in 20 years !!!
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,952,889 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,190 in Cloud Computing (Books) #1,352 in Web Marketing (Books) #1,666 in E-Commerce (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 130 Reviews |
L**S
Great book about Alibaba and the Chinese e-commerce
Itโs a really good book about Alibabaโs rise and interesting overview about the Chinese e-commerce situation and its turbulent development.
W**D
Your best investment!!!
This Harvard Business School book will make you wealthy !!! Put $20,000 in BABA now and maybe end up with $20 million in 20 years !!!
P**.
Insightful and eye opening
Smart Business digs down into the way Alibaba thinks and executes its businesses. Several ideas are very eye opening and give us the idea of how things will change.
C**L
Amazing company, great book, incredible simplicity
Amazing company, great book, incredible simplicity: points, lines and plane; network coordination; data intelligence.
L**L
Board Members and CEOs: Is Your Business C:B Ready?
Ming Zeng received a Ph.D. in international business and strategy at the University of Illinois. His first role was Assistant Professor at INSEAD, one of Europeโs top business schools. Chinaโs technology company Alibabaโs founder Jack Ma invited Ming to become Chief Strategy Officer of the firm. Ming Zeng thus has solid footing in Western and Chinese ways of doing business. Zeng's book SMART BUSINESS (2018) has the following objective: โI do not want to increase Western apprehension about China, especially when so much anxiety is already unwarranted. Instead I want to shine a light on Chinaโs extremely relevant and enlightening experience. โ B:B;B:C; and C:B Most Western leaders understand the difference between a Business-to-Business (B:B) revenue model versus a Business-to-Consumer (B:C) model. The real world is more complex. For example, Is health care delivery in the United States B:C or B:B? The answer, of course, is โYes.โ Ming introduces us to a third business model. He calls it Customer-to-Business or C:B. DELL Computer had an early version of C:B: Thirty years ago a customer could go to dell.com and select the specific components she wanted in her next personal computer. She designed the computer she wanted to purchase form a list of online specifications. Once the โSendโ button was pressed a complex information system went to work to insure supplies were ordered, manufacturing time was scheduled, delivery systems established, and payments received. Ming calls this C:B because the customer was the prime mover. Each DELL PC was made to order and yet it was also a mass production system. In this early version of C:B, DELL owned or tried to own as many of the key components of the production-delivery system as possible. Amazon is a modern U.S. version of the C:B model. The customer is the prime mover. Every order is unique and yet it is a mass production. Amazon seeks to own as many of the key components of the delivery-production system as possible or wants customers to work through Amazon. A Modern Chinese version of C:B: Twenty-five-year-old entrepreneur Zhang Linchao is the face of Chinaโs online clothing brand, LIN Edition. She is a social media influencer, a model, and a fashion designer. At 3:00PM on a Spring day, Zhangโs company placed fifteen new clothing pieces designed by her on sale. Customers have seen previews of todayโs sale on social media. By 3:45PM, 10,000 items were sold at an average price of $US150 per order. Like DELL, each order will go through a complex supply chain to ensure that customers receive the item specified. Each order is unique to the customer and yet it also is mass produced. Unlike DELL or AMAZON, Zhang's company does not own the supply chain or even control it. Zhang provides the creativity and the social media presence. In the first four months of 2015 her company earned U.S. $11 Million in sales with a profit margin of 30%. Alibaba provided Zhang with the the front-end customer facing system and then coordinated all the order information to a network of small businesses manufacturing companies and delivery systems. Unlike Dell or Amazon, Zhang does not control the delivery system. Alibaba does not control the system. Everything works through information sharing and social coordination. How has this C:B system worked for Alibaba? Alibaba is the largest retail commerce company in the world. More than ten million merchants run their businesses on Alibabaโs platforms and most of these operations are small. Alibaba connects these small businesses to a network of four hundred million active buyers. Each year, Alibabaโs Chinese retail marketplace generates gross merchandise volume of more than U.S.$0.5 trillion. This C:B model is a network of buyers, sellers, and service providers coming together and coordinating with each other through real-time data. The Alibaba model is all about using machine-learning and social networking to achieve scale and to manage complexity in a C:B world. This is a different model from the U.S.-centered framework. That model views scaling-up through command/control of as many components of the customer delivery system as possible. The author states: โAlibaba does not by any means have everything figured out. Its notions of strategy and organization have diverged dramatically from traditional models and are producing previously unthinkable levels of growth. I have written this book to summarize the lessons we have learned at Alibaba and to guide businesses around the world through the new strategic landscape of smart businesses.โ
R**S
How Alibaba is disrupting entire industries with its companies, traditional, or brand new
In a previously published book, Dragons at Your Door: How Chinese Cost Innovation Is Disrupting Global Competition (2007), Ming Zeng and Peter Williamson explain how and why managers will need to go beyond merely equating innovation with providing more functionality and greater sophistication, and start creating business models aimed to deliver high technology at low cost, and variety and customisation without a hefty price premium, and to unlock latent demand by offering the kind of value for money that turns todayโs cosy niche segment into tomorrowโs mass markets. In Smart Business, Zeng shifts his attention to lessons to be learned from Akibaba's success in terms of the "three faces" of cost innovation: how offering high technology at low cost, a near-impossible range of choice, and "speciality products" at volume prices have created impressive inroads to markets long assumed impenetrable. He carefully organizes valuable information, insights, and counsel within three Parts. First, he introduces what he characterizes as the two core pillars of smart companies: "Network coordination enables large-scale business networks, while data intelligence ensures efficient operations and decisions across the network." He describes in detail the transformation of the business landscape "through the duel forces of network coordination and data intelligence...The transformation of the business landscape is best understood -- and achieved -- in terms of network coordination and data intelligence." Then in Part 2, Zeng lays out the principles and practices as well as strategic implications of the process by which companies become smart businesses. "For smart businesses, the game is now one of coordination among interconnected players, where data intelligence makes all the players smarter...In Part 3, I turn to organizational implications of the new strategic environment...operating as a smart business requires a different process of formulating and executing strategy. These changes in turn mandate a different kind of organization, with different processes, systems, and roles for managers."I highly recommend Smart Business as well as Dragons at Your Door.
A**X
Not a big fan of this book. Itโs a synthesis of some of best practices wrapped as a big case study
Not a big fan of this book. Itโs seems like a synthesis of some of the common best practices for technology businesses wrapped as a big case study and delivered as a โstrategic framework.โ I could be a bit biased as I work for one of the companies mentioned in the book and Iโve also been steeped in many of these concepts for sometime. If youโve read anything about big data, machine learning, and platform/multi-sided businesses, youโll probably only get a summarization from this book. For me, the best thing I received were some of the case studies and the appendices. The author also uses new names to define old terms. For example, he uses C2B to describe what most would know as the pull model. Later in the book he actually refers to it as the pull model. There are a few new ideas Iโve been able to garner from this book, but at the end of the day this is a book pushing Alibaba group of companies as innovative smart businesses. Kudos.
A**S
Are Mom-and-Pop businesses a thing of the past?
First there was ALIBABA (a classic under dog adventure tale). Then there was The 2008 Olympics in Beijing (marketing raised to a level that has no word to describe it). Then there was Crazy Rich Asians (all that extravagance but arenโt they fun peopleโand so kind-hearted at their core). Now Ming Zeng tells us about the fourth business revolution (after Industrial, Managerial, and Knowledge). The fourth business revolution, as he sees it, is Creativity. As an artist, I didnโt realize until he started seriously using the word creativity at the end of the book, that that was how he hooked me. And once I was hooked, I was exhilarated. Heโs describing a future I can look forward to. Contrary to the โ1984โ inspired images of masses of people in gray uniforms marching in step under an authoritarian, digitally-empowered tyrant, the portrait of Alibaba's China that Zeng paints is of underserved individual consumers and businesses being empowered by online technologies, joining the global marketplace, and creating a new economic base that is inclusive, flexible, and open-ended. And thatโs what Zeng says this is all about. Empowering individuals with a massive network, but one that communicates constantly and processes data in real time. That means that every action an individual takes online helps to create the future. It gives new meaning to the concept of voting with your pocket book. Alibabaโs spin off Taobao claims to have developed a system that can deliver to rural China (with minimal infrastructure) same day. Somethingโs going on here. Zeng tells us that itโs inspired. He says that Alibabaโs algorithms are created to search for small businesses that are successful (answering the Mom-and-Pop question I started with), not just the businesses with the highest numbers. He says it redefining the idea of an ecosystem. Itโs exciting. I hope heโs on to something here. I hope that itโs something that canโt be high-jacked by silo-style competitors. This is a book that truly changed my mindset about participating in the world. Despite the overwhelming amount of information Zeng presents, this is a highly readable book even for entry-level techies. (InannaWorks.com received a free review copy of this book.)
C**.
from strategy to operational details - excellent
a new way to approach companies strategy. eye opener even for brick & mortar executives
P**R
Superb Read
Smart Business is one of best book, if anybody wants to know how technology helps business to grow
M**V
Alibaba's history
This book opened my eyes on the Alibaba company. How everything was developed and what challenges faced.
A**N
Great read
In the flow of reading you may find things a little repetitive but overall an inspiration to see how Machine Learning can not only transform a business but have a great impact on lives of people and country's economy.
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