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The fight will be long. Businesses and society must plan for multiple scenarios to survive the crisis and emerge stronger. | |
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Business leaders are rightly focused on keeping their people safe. They also need to help them feel supported, stay connected, and discover new ways to work productively together. | | |
Many companies were lucky to survive the global financial crisis, but some seized the opportunity to make needed changes. Here are lessons from the top performers. | | |
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Shifts in global supply chains, changing consumption patterns, and the increasing prevalence of remote ways of working—trends that were underway long before the COVID-19 crisis—will accelerate. AI can help companies thrive in this new environment. | | |
Don’t hunker down and wait for a return to the past. Here are eight practical measures companies can take to sense, exploit, and shape the postcrisis reality. | | |
The complexity of this crisis can be paralyzing. But by approaching it methodically and with data, companies can act decisively as the business landscape evolves. | | |
Mitigating climate change will require a way to scrub carbon dioxide from the atmosphere for good. A few companies have the right incentives to launch that effort today. | | |
Survival is top of mind today for many companies, but thriving is the long game. That calls on leaders to respond to a new environment, a new customer, and heightened societal expectations. Here are five imperatives for adapting to and shaping the post-COVID world. | | |
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These high-priority actions will help governors and mayors address critical challenges in health care, society, and the economy during the coronavirus outbreak. | | |
With no precedent to guide them, governments must create a strategy for reopening economic and social life. A graduated plan, governed at the national level and implemented at the local level, offers flexibility and opportunities for learning. | | |
Defense agencies receiving a surge in COVID-19 stimulus funds must urgently adopt new patterns of procurement. | | |
Governments must start planning for a post-COVID-19 world that brings bigger benefits to more of society and business. Three priorities stand out. | | |
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Boston Consulting Group
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