Upending the Pyramid: Remembering CK Prahalad
In a change to the advertised programme, Peter Day looks back at the life and influence of the Indian born management guru Professor CK Prahalad who's just died.
In a changed to the advertised programme, this week's In Business is a tribute to the influential management thinker Professor CK Prahalad, who died on April 16th in San Diego, California at the age of 68 after a short illness.
Professor Prahalad was born in India, but he made his name in the USA as a management expert at Harvard and the University of Michigan's Ross Business School. With Gary Hamel he devised the concept of corporate core competence which became a watchword for international business when it was published in their book "Competing for the Future" in 1994.
But CK Prahalad went on to produce an even more influential idea. In 2002 Peter Day interviewed Prof Prahalad about his Harvard Business Review article on what he called "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid"... the profits multinational companies could make by turning their attention to producing goods and services for the global poor. This became a best-selling book two years later, and it had a very big impact on the way developing markets were seen by companies, bankers, politicians and policy makers all over the world.
This In Business listens again to Professor Prahalad's thoughts about the rise of the new developing world consumer and the impact on the companies, countries and non government organisations. His ideas changed the way the rich half of the world thinks about the poor half, and they will resonate long after his death.
Producer: Richard Berenger
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- Sun 25 Apr 2010 21:30麻豆社 Radio 4
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