Rita McGrath. Headshot of Rita McGrath wearing a blue collared jacket. She's sitting down and posing with one hand on her cheek. She's in front of a grey/green wall.

Rita McGrath

C-Suite Strategist | Columbia University Business School Professor | Thinkers 50 Top 10 | Best-Selling Author

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Book Rita McGrath, Business Strategy Speaker

About This Speaker

Rita McGrath is one of the world’s top experts on strategy and innovation. Rita consistently ranks among the top 10 management thinkers in the world by the prestigious Thinkers50 and won their #1 award in strategy. She is a trusted partner and strategic advisor in the C-suites of many of the country’s biggest and most well-known companies, especially as they work to grow, evolve, reinvent themselves and see around corners.

Rita McGrath is one of the world’s foremost experts on strategic inflection points. This is the topic of her most recent book, Seeing Around Corners: How to Spot Inflection Points in Business Before They Happen (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019). She is the author of four other books on leadership, business and organizational management including the best-selling The End of Competitive Advantage (Harvard Business Review Press, 2013).

Her work on discovery-driven growth was praised by the late legendary management thinker, Clayton Christensen, as offering “some of the most important ideas of management and strategy that have ever been developed.” Currently working on a book full of humor and insight for business leaders, Rita aims to help organizations become ‘2% less stupid’ by adopting permission-less structures.

Rita regularly sits down for in-depth conversations with high level authors and leaders in business for her popular podcast Thought Sparks. She also writes a regular Thought Sparks newsletter and shares insights across social media platforms, including LinkedIn, where she has more than 45,000 followers.

Known for her energy, positivity, storytelling, and ability to connect with audiences, Rita McGrath is a sought-after corporate speaker. Also a long-time educator at Columbia Business School, author and podcast host, her expertise shines beyond the keynote stage.

Videos

Speaking Topics: Rita McGrath

Catch a Wave: The New Strategy Playbook

We’ve all seen the story play out. A company experiences phenomenal success, their CEO makes the cover of notable business publications, and business writers use them as examples for the rest of us. Then, somehow, the firm gets into trouble. Competitors capture their customers, margins shrink, investors grumble, activists turn up, the CEO, or a succession of CEOs, are shown the door, and eventually the company disappears or becomes irrelevant. A root cause, McGrath argues, is the pervasive belief that a competitive advantage, once established, is enduring. This belief leads to complacency, inward focus, loss of customer engagement and a stifling of innovation. Instead, smart strategists leave old assumptions at the door and pursue opportunities to establish and exploit transient advantages. You will learn: • Why too much stability can be your enemy – and how to embrace continuous reconfiguration • Why existing metrics will lead you astray – and what you should be measuring instead • Why healthy disengagement from a fading business is one of the most important practices to get right • How it’s a trap to believe your most important competitors are others in your industry • Why innovation is not optional • How to lead when command-and-control doesn’t work • How to manage talent in a ‘tour of duty’ context

Failing By Design - Making the Most out of Intelligent Failures

Most organizations suffer from a pervasive anti-failure bias. When things don’t work out as planned, those seen as responsible are branded as having failed. Here’s the problem: in fundamentally unpredictable environments, it is a fool’s game to make bold predictions, because you simply don’t have the information you need. Getting the information when you really don’t know requires some kind of experimentation. Some experiments don’t work out, but that doesn’t mean they failed. It simply means that particular path forward isn’t going to work. Failure is essential if your organization is to take the controlled risks to engage in the innovations crucial to effective competition. To gain these benefits, follow six principles: 1) Plan to convert assumptions to knowledge; 2) be quick about it; 3) contain the downside risk; 4) make sure uncertainty is genuine, but not overwhelming; 5) intelligent failures are celebrated; and 6) learning is codified and transferred. You will learn: • How being tolerant of failure can expand the range of possibilities an organization is willing to try • How failure can help you attract resources and attention • Why failure and intuition are inextricably linked • How failure helps you learn what doesn’t work so that you can focus on learning what does • How to make the distinction between bad management and bad luck • How to write a contract for intelligent failure • How failure can accelerate organizational learning

Discovery Driven Planning: Conquering Death By Spreadsheet

You have what you think is a great idea to pursue an attractive new opportunity. Before you can make progress, though, you are hit with a barrage of questions that you have no way of answering. “What will the ROI of this venture be?”; “how long will it take to launch”; “how will it affect our existing product lines?”. If you’re like people in many organizations, you will dutifully put together a conventional business plan, with details about the idea, spreadsheets that project what the financials could look like and GANTT or similar charts laying out the project timeline. And even as you are doing all this, you know in your heart of hearts that this is more a quantification of fantasy than it is likely to bring your idea to life. There is a better way. In the seminal work that formed the basis for the Lean Startup movement, McGrath describes how to create a plan for a new venture that gets you to early answers fast, by focusing on the most critical assumptions that you need to convert to facts. It’s disciplined, but it’s a discipline that comes straight out of the entrepreneurial mindset. You will learn: • Why people make so many costly mistakes in high-uncertainty situations • How to define success so that you can specify what must be true to achieve it • How to avoid being unrealistic about what your venture might be able to achieve • How to break a large, complex, project down into manageable checkpoints • How to compare different potential business models • How to think in terms of cost to learn rather than total project budgeting

Snow Melts from the Edges: How to See Around Corners

Companies that are blindsided by changes in their environment or disruptions in their competitive space have one thing in common: Their executives and decision-makers somehow got disconnected from the “edges” of the organization—where small changes start brewing before their implications are obvious to everybody. So too, when a big opportunity is missed or dismissed. Why, for instance, did Microsoft initially miss something like five major shifts in underlying technology as it tried to defend its Windows franchise, and why is it regaining relevance now?

Workshops & Webinars

Rita’s on-line workshops and webinars are engaging, interactive events that can be customized for specific client needs. Participants can join in from wherever they are – and the timing can be customized for different parts of the world.

Consulting

Rita is available for consulting assignments. Usually these involve working through a thorny strategic challenge that needs a fresh approach, just as her workshops and webinars do. These are usually on a retainer basis and guarantee that she’ll be available on your schedule, as needed.

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