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How Stella Saved the Farm

A Tale About Making Innovation Happen

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

How Stella Saved the Farm is a simple parable about making innovation happen. Written by the authors of the New York Times bestselling Reverse Innovation: Create Far From Home, Win Everywhere, Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble.
This story resonates in organizations of all types—public sector, private sector, and social sector, from mammoth corporations to small organizations employing just a few dozen people.
The parable is about a farm in trouble. Bankruptcy, or the grim prospect of being acquired by a hostile competitor, threaten. The farm succeeds only if the team pulls together and innovates.
The main characters in the story—Stella, Deirdre, Bull, Mav, Einstein, Rambo, Maisie, and Andrea—are all like people you know, maybe even yourself. The tale includes an unexpected leadership challenge, an ambitious call to action, a bold idea, countless internal obstacles and conflicts, fears, joys, triumphs, and even a love interest.
It's a story that can be enjoyed by anyone. In How Stella Saved the Farm delivers eight simple lessons to guide innovation initiatives to success. It prepares business leaders to avoid some of innovation's most toxic myths, teaches how to build the right kind of team, and shows how to learn quickly from experience.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Ari Fliakos brings earnestness to a business audiobook that uses Orwell's ANIMAL FARM as its conceit. This unconventional storytelling device provides parables on innovation as the farm animals try to decide who will be appointed leader when their current one ages. It's challenging listening, but Fliakos's narration is capable, consistent, and lively. Fliakos manages to make the character of the female sheep, Stella, believable. Creating the sound of a female voice with impressive vocal range, he characterizes her lines without sounded forced. The dialogue and debate between the animals make them vivid characters. What it all means, however, is up to the listener to decide. M.R. (c) AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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