Posts Tagged ‘innovation’
Top 10 New Blockchain Companies To Watch For In 2018 | Forbes
thousands of innovative companies around the world are trying to solve market inefficiencies by leveraging the benefits that blockchain technology provides. These companies can be found in every industry, from content creation and transportation to financial services.The blockchain ecosystem flourishes due to tokenized economies, developers, service providers and entrepreneurs who are breaking the mold. Here are 10 companies on my radar using blockchain technology as a core piece of their business to make a difference.
Source: Top 10 New Blockchain Companies To Watch For In 2018, Andrew Rossow, July 10, 2018
Read MoreShipping: IBM, Maersk Are Creating a New Blockchain Company | Fortune
Presently, many shipping supply chains are bogged down by a morass of paperwork shuffled between a glut of middlemen, Wieck says. Documentation, which when lost or delayed causes perishable goods lying in wait to spoil, can end up costing as much as a fifth of the total expense of physical transportation.
According to a 2013 study by the World Economic Forum, reducing the friction around information-sharing and border administration when it comes to international trade “could increase GDP by nearly 5% and trade by 15%”—a boost that amounts to trillions of dollars.
Source: Shipping: IBM, Maersk Are Creating a New Blockchain Company | Fortune, Robert Hackett, January 16, 2018
Read MoreBitcoin Ethereum: How Blockchain Tech Is Revolutionizing Business | Fortune
One day last December, Frank Yiannas went to a Walmart store near company headquarters in Fayetteville, Ark., and picked up a package of sliced mangoes. Yiannas is Walmart’s vice president of food safety, and the fruit was part of a crucial experiment. He brought the mangoes back to his office, placed the container on a…
Read MoreWhy Blockchain Will Change Everything | Fortune
Read MoreFrom insurance to airplane manufacturing, to tracking a fruit’s shipping history.
How the World’s Oldest Company Reinvented Itself | HBR
On a larger scale, the Pathbuilder group supported Stora Enso’s transformation into a global renewable materials company. In 2006, 70% of revenues and 60% of the company’s profits still came from paper; today the new growth businesses contribute 67% of sales and 76% of profits. Since 2011 the share price has more than doubled. The culture is also evolving and improving, as evidenced by an annual survey that tracks the main levers for the transformation, including innovation and sustainability, leadership, team, and engagement.
Here’s how the Pathbuilder program succeeded — and how you can implement it at your company.
Source: How the World’s Oldest Company Reinvented Itself | HBR, Albrecht Enders and Lars Haggstrom, January 30, 2018
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