Jonas Ridderstråle
Swedish business theorist
Jonas Ridderstråle (born August 26, 1966) is a Swedish business speaker, thinker and author, best known for the bestselling book Funky Business - Talent Makes Capital Dance. He has been visiting professor at Ashridge Business School and IE Business School.
This economist article is a stub. You can help out with Wikiquote by expanding it! |
Quotes
edit- We find support for the contingency logic, suggesting that effective organization design has to take into account the underlying characteristics of the firm's knowledge base.
- Julian Birkinshaw, Robert Nobel, and Jonas Ridderstråle. "Knowledge as a contingency variable: do the characteristics of knowledge predict organization structure?." Organization science 13.3 (2002): 274-289.
- Some bodies of knowledge emerge over time in a process of coevolution with the location in which they are embedded.
- Julian Birkinshaw, Robert Nobel, and Jonas Ridderstråle. "Knowledge as a contingency variable: do the characteristics of knowledge predict organization structure?." Organization science 13.3 (2002): 274-289.
Karaoke Capitalism, 2005
editJonas Ridderstråle and Kjell Nordström (2005), Karaoke Capitalism: Daring to be Different in a Copycat World.
- It is also worth noting that it is extremely difficult to be a great buyer of complementary competencies if you do not have any knowledge about the stuff you are acquiring. Friedrich Nietzsche pointed out that a man has no ears for that to which experience has given him no access. We need knowledge to be able to outsource knowledge.
- p. 233
Funky Business Forever, 2007
editJonas Ridderstråle and Kjell A. Nordström (2007). Funky Business Forever: How to Enjoy Capitalism.
- Gallery visitors did not tell Picasso to invent cubism. Jazz fanatics did not suggest that Miles Davies should work with hip-hoppers. Moviegoers did not propose to Lars von Trier, the Danish film director, that he make Breaking the Waves. And customers sure as hell did not come up with the idea for CDNow or Amazon.com. If you want to do something really interesting and revolutionary, learn to ignore your customers.
- p. 184
External links
edit