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Categories
100 Days of Innovation
About Jim Carroll About the recession Articles Branding & marketing Change Faster Gen-Y & Gen-Connect Global economy How to be innovative Human capital issues Industry - Agriculture Industry - Associations Industry - Consumer & food Industry - Education Industry - Financial Industry - Health Care Industry - Hi-tech Industry - Manufacturing Industry - Prof. services Industry - Retail Innovation Keynotes Leadership Press Strategy Trends Video |
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Jim Carroll's blog | ||||||||||
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Recent video clips
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This morning, I caught wind of a blog entry that commented on the general crankiness of American's towards their "crumbling infrastructure." For example, Thomas Friedman commented in a New York Times article this week: "A few weeks ago, my wife and I flew from New York’s Kennedy Airport to Singapore. In J.F.K.’s waiting lounge we could barely find a place to sit. Eighteen hours later, we landed at Singapore’s ultramodern airport, with free Internet portals and children’s play zones throughout. We felt, as we have before, like we had just flown from the Flintstones to the Jetsons. It's the rapid ramp-up in sentiments like this that drive the reality that infrastructure is the new plastic. It's one aspect of the global economy where spending is going to increase at a furious pace. Consider the trends that are coming together that provide for this simple reality:
One really interesting aspect of all this is that anything that goes with infrastructure spending is set for a rocket ride. Think intelligent project management, global collaboration capabilities, and resource/skills scalability: these will be the defining success factors for anyone working in this global marketplace. Who wins? Construction companies, specialized skills, economic regions that decide to invest -- and most important, firms that have a deep, scalable global talent pool. And perhaps one of the biggest, yet unforeseen markets, will have to do with "intelligent infrastructure." Think thermostats! More information:
Permanent link to this item ...posted May 9, 2008
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