首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Read the article on the opposite page about innovation in business and the questions below. For each question 15-20, mark one le
Read the article on the opposite page about innovation in business and the questions below. For each question 15-20, mark one le
admin
2012-12-14
139
问题
Read the article on the opposite page about innovation in business and the questions below.
For each question 15-20, mark one letter (A, B, C or D) on your Answer Sheet for the answer you choose.
Not long ago innovation was The Big Idea in marketing circles. Now, however, it’s hard to see the benefits of this rush to innovate. Indeed if anything, companies seem to be drawing back from innovation, not charging ahead. But just a few years ago many companies were combining a commitment to create entirely new product categories through innovative technologies working to hugely ambitious growth targets with a root-and-branch organisational overhaul designed to free up creativity and speed new product roll-outs.
The result was that as resources were shifted away from core businesses, sales and profits faltered, share prices slumped and CEOs were ousted. Now the mantra is a more conservative focus on the top brands, the top retail customers and the top markets. It’s being rewarded in many cases by healthier share prices. This sustained effort to cut long tails of smaller brands and focus marketing resource on existing leaders seems to be paying off.
So were we wrong to pinpoint innovation as key to long-term market success? Surely not. But we might have underestimated the enormous complexity of this beast. The term "innovation" may be simple enough but it spans a vast landscape, including the type and degree of innovation, marketing purpose, management process and market circumstance, not all of which are well understood.
Take "type" of innovation. Are we talking about new products only? Or new processes, new channels, underlying technologies, organisational structures and business models? When should the innovation involve a new brand? Or take "degree". Are we aiming for blue-sky inventions that will transform markets and create new categories? Or marginal tweaks in, say, formulation or packaging that give us an excuse to advertise something "New! Improved!"? Likewise, is the marketing purpose of the project to steal a march on competitors and drive incremental growth, or to update an obsolete product line and play catch-up to competitors? As one business news editorial complained, "innovation" is often just "simple proliferation of similar products". Then there’s process. What is the best way to manage this particular innovation? Is it to employ creative revolutionaries and set them free, or is disciplined risk management, requiring the careful testing and sifting of options to pick winners a better approach? In larger organisations, has senior management really made time spent in cross-functional teams a recognised element of successful career paths? What time frames (eg. payback periods) and degrees of risk is senior management comfortable with? And does the organisation have a culture that fits the chosen approach? Does it "celebrate failure", for example, or is it actually a risk-averse blame culture (despite what the CEO says in the annual report) ?
Successful innovation requires clearing two hurdles. First, it needs the right project with the right degree of innovation to fit with the right marketing purpose, the right innovation process, corporate culture and market circumstance. Second, it needs senior managers that understand the interplay between these different factors, so that rather than coming together simply by chance, they are deliberately brought together in different ways to meet different circumstances.
Clearing Hurdle Two can happen "by accident". Clearing Hurdle One requires real skill. We can all point to admirable, inspiring innovations. But how many companies can we point to and say "these people have mastered the art of innovation"? Brilliant innovation is a wonderful thing. Expert innovation management is even better and much rarer.
Doubt is expressed in the final paragraph as to whether______.
选项
A、most businesses realise the conditions required for innovation
B、businesses should trust in benefits which they did not predict
C、the majority of businesses are able to innovate successfully
D、businesses should expect individual staff to generate ideas
答案
C
解析
最后一段中作者使用一个疑问句:“buthow many companies can we point to andsay‘these people have mastered the art ofinnovation’?”说明对于“是否大多数公司的成功创新”这一问题是怀疑的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/6Q7d777K
本试题收录于:
BEC高级阅读题库BEC商务英语分类
0
BEC高级阅读
BEC商务英语
相关试题推荐
Whattypeofbusinessdothespeakersmostlikelyworkfor?
Whattypeofbusinessisthemanmostlikelycalling?
WhattypeofbusinessisHarmonyforLess?
Whattypeofbusinessdoesthespeakermostlikelyworkfor?
TaskSheetforCandidateATaskSheet1A:Stafftraining:howtomaintainthestaff’sinterestinthe–company’strainingpr
Task4AttractingNewBusinessClientsYouworkforacompany,whichprovidesmeetingfacilitiesforbusinessclients.Yourdepa
Question询问
Theinterlocutorasksyouquestionsonanumberofwork-relatedandnonwork-relatedsubjects.
•Youwillheararecruitingmanagertellinghowtofindjobsontheweb.•Asyoulisten,forquestions1-12,completethenotes
A.beingontimeforanyinterviewB.beingnicetoeveryoneyoutalktoC.beinghonestintheinterviewD.become
随机试题
一雌性腊肠犬,5岁,1个月来精神沉郁,时有发热,抗生素治疗后病情好转,停药后复发。现病情加重,阴部流红褐色分泌物,B超探查见双则子宫角增粗,内有液性暗区。该病错误的治疗方法是
A.面色暗淡B.面色萎黄C.眼周发黑D.面色黧黑,肌肤甲错E.面色青黄肾虚水饮或寒湿带下的病人多表现为
用“灌砂法”测定砂石路面压实度的步骤中,在“将基板放回清扫干净的表面上,沿基板中孔凿洞”步骤之前应是( )。
A、 B、 C、 D、 D第一列小线段左右平移组成的角都为90°,三者之和为270°,第二列小线段上下平移组成的角度分别为135°,0°,135°,三者之和也为270°,则第三列小线段经左右平移组成的角度之和
洲际导弹通常指射程大于8000公里的远程弹道式导弹。目前,中国研制的洲际弹道导弹主要是什么系列的?
一条隧道,甲单独挖要20天完成,乙单独挖要10天完成。如果甲先挖1天,然后乙接替甲挖1天,再由甲接替乙挖1天……两人如此交替工作。那么,挖完这条隧道共用多少天?()
联系我国法治建设的实际,谈谈当代中国法律在构建和谐社会中的作用。要求:观点明确,说理充分,条理清晰,语言规范、流畅。
下列有关法的溯及力的表述,正确的有()。
在信息资源管理的框架中,(41)既不是数据资源管理的核心,也不为MIS、DSS以及基于知识的系统提供基础数据。
______,VincenteT.Ximenesspentmanyyearsasagovernmenteconomist.
最新回复
(
0
)