Remove Industry Remove Information Technology Remove Intellectual Property Remove Productivity
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Why Law Firms Need IT Policies

Kraft Kennedy

Is it acceptable to use your family computer to access your firm’s work product? The answers to these and hundreds of other questions should be documented and considered integra l to the operations of all organizations, especially in industries where work product and client data are highly sensitive, and highly valuable.

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Why Are We Still Classifying Companies by Industry?

Harvard Business

For more than 60 years, investors, analysts, business leaders, and even governments, have classified companies based on industries. Industry walls are disintegrating at a rapid pace. They have expanded far beyond the “Information Technology” tag attached to them by GICS. It’s not an industry in itself.

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FTI Consulting Interviews and Culture

Management Consulted

Compared to its peers, FTI Consulting is a youngster in the consulting industry. Originally founded in 1982 by Dan Luczak as “Forensic Technologies International Ltd., Luczak pioneered solutions at the intersection of law, communications and technology that affected not only the cases he was involved in, but the industry itself.

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The Brattle Group Interviews and Culture

Management Consulted

Intellectual property. Product liability. Industries. The skills you learned at graduate school or in the industry will be put to use to solve clients’ real-world problems. They hire and develop some of the best and the brightest in our industry. Commercial damages. Environmental litigation Regulation.

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The Real Reason Superstar Firms Are Pulling Ahead

Harvard Business

Across industries and across countries, a small number of “superstar” firms are pulling away from the competition. They’re more productive, as the chart below illustrates. One answer to that first question shows up in study after study: superstar firms are succeeding in large part due to information technology.

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Where Trump Does (and Doesn’t) Have Leverage with China

Harvard Business

Low-wage economies like Mexico’s and China’s absorb American technology and build industrial capability more easily today than ever. made products over the next 10 years. service industries like higher education, publishing, design, and consulting. Plus, the trade-weighted value of the U.S.