Vijay Govindarajan
Earl C. Daum 1924 Professor of International Business at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College
Reverse Innovation is a playbook for leaders who want to unlock growth in emerging markets.
Vijay Govindarajan is widely regarded as one of the world's leading experts on strategy and innovation. He is the Earl C. Daum 1924 Professor of International Business at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. He was the first Professor in Residence and Chief Innovation Consultant at General Electric. He worked with GE's CEO Jeff Immelt to write "How GE is Disrupting Itself", the Harvard Business Review article that pioneered the concept of reverse innovation – any innovation that is adopted first in the developing world. Harvard Business Review rated reverse innovation as one of the ten big ideas of the decade. VG writes about the business impact of innovation with an emphasis on execution on his blog and through his quarterly newsletter.
Govindarajan has been identified as a leading management thinker by influential publications including: Outstanding Faculty, named by Business Week in its Guide to Best B-Schools; Top Ten Business School Professor in Corporate Executive Education, named by Business Week; Top Five Most Respected Executive Coach on Strategy, rated by Forbes; Top 50 Management Thinker, named by The London Times; Rising Super Star, cited by The Economist; Outstanding Teacher of the Year, voted by MBA students. Prior to joining the faculty at Tuck, VG was on the faculties of Harvard Business School, INSEAD (Fontainebleau) and the Indian Institute of Management (Ahmedabad, India).
The recipient of numerous awards for excellence in research, Govindarajan was inducted into the Academy of Management Journals' Hall of Fame, and ranked by Management International Review as one of the Top 20 North American Superstars for research in strategy and organization. One of his papers was recognized as one of the ten most-often cited articles in the entire 40-year history of Academy of Management Journal. VG is a rare faculty who has published more than ten articles in the top academic journals (Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal) and more than ten articles in prestigious practitioner journals including several bestselling Harvard Business Review articles. He has published nine books, including international bestsellers Ten Rules for Strategic Innovators and The Other Side of Innovation.
VG works with CEOs and top management teams in Global Fortune 500 firms to discuss, challenge, and escalate their thinking about strategy. He has worked with more than 25% of the Fortune 500 corporations including: Boeing, Coca-Cola, Colgate, Deere, FedEx, GE, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, J.P. Morgan Chase, Johnson & Johnson, New York Times, Procter & Gamble, Sony, and Wal-Mart. He is a regular keynote speaker in CEO Forums and major conferences including the World Innovation Forum, BusinessWeek CEO Forum, World Business Forum, and World Economic Forum at Davos.
VG received his doctorate from the Harvard Business School and wasawarded the Robert Bowne Prize for the best thesis proposal. He also received his MBA with distinction from the Harvard Business School where he was included in the Dean's Honor List. Prior to this, VG received his Chartered Accountancy degree in India where he was awarded the President's Gold Medal for obtaining the first rank nationwide.
Articles by Vijay Govindarajan View All
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Can Anyone Stop Amazon from Winning the Industrial Internet
Vijay GovindarajanJust the announcement that Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffett, and Jaime Dimon will be entering the health care space has sent shock waves for industry incumbents such as CVS, Cigna, and UnitedHealth.
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How to Engineer a Reverse Innovation
Vijay GovindarajanWhen a company investigates a new product opportunity, it is important to define the problem, and the requirements that will dictate a viable solution, independently from the company’s existing lines of similar products or preconceived ideas of what a solution should entail.
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Get a Better Return on Your Business Intelligence
Vijay GovindarajanThere is a lot of hype and buzz around business intelligence. Companies are investing millions of dollars in business intelligence technology.
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Health Care for 1% of the Cost
Vijay GovindarajanHealth Care for 1% of the Cost There is a general consensus that U.S. healthcare needs major reform. Can reverse innovation — innovations originating from poor countries — provide one important answer? Most definitely.
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How to Build a Reverse Innovator
Vijay GovindarajanIn recent years Stanford University's BioDesign program has sent teams of engineering, business, and medical students into hospitals, hoping to identify medical problems that new devices could help solve.
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Match Your Innovation Process to the Results You Want
Vijay GovindarajanWe are often asked whether the best way to structure for innovation is top-down or bottom-up. The answer is both, but it depends. Bottom-up approaches work well for incremental (keeps you in the game) innovations.
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Yes, You Can Brainstorm Without Groupthink
Vijay GovindarajanIn articles in both the New York Times and The New Yorker earlier this year, the concept of brainstorming as introduced in the 1940's by Alex Osborn has been attacked as ineffective and linked to the concept of "Groupthink." In her NYT piece and in an HBR ideacast, Susan Cain points ou...
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Q&A with Vijay Govindarajan
Vijay GovindarajanInstead of developing products in the west and bringing them to emerging markets, brands should do just the opposite, argues Vijay Govindarajan in his book “Reverse Innovation.” We spoke to the business professor about what that means.
Have you seen Vijay Govindarajan speak? What did you think?