The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid

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出版者:Wharton School Publishing
作者:C. K. Prahalad
出品人:
页数:401
译者:
出版时间:2004-08-15
价格:USD 29.99
装帧:Hardcover
isbn号码:9780131467507
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • enterprise
  • 管理
  • social
  • 扶贫
  • 市场
  • 企业
  • finance
  • 贫穷
  • 贫困
  • 发展
  • 经济
  • 社会
  • 激励
  • 创业
  • 基层
  • 增长
  • 普惠
  • 机会
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具体描述

Preface Preface This book is a result of a long and lonely journey for me. It started during the Christmas vacation of 1995. During that period of celebration and good cheer, one issue kept nagging me: What are we doing about the poorest people around the world? Why is it that with all our technology, managerial know-how, and investment capacity, we are unable to make even a minor contribution to the problem of pervasive global poverty and disenfranchisement? Why can t we create inclusive capitalism? Needless to say, these are not new questions. However, as one who is familiar with both the developed and the developing world, the contrasts kept gnawing at me. It became clear that finding a solution to the problems of those at the bottom of the economic pyramid around the world should be an integral part of my next intellectual journey. It was also clear that we have to start with a new approach, a "clean sheet of paper." We have to learn from the successes and failures of the past; the promises made and not fulfilled. Doing more of the same, by refining the solutions of the past developmental aid, subsidies, governmental support, localized nongovernmental organization (NGO) based solutions, exclusive reliance on deregulation and privatization of public assets is important and has a role to play, but has not redressed the problem of poverty. Although NGOs worked tirelessly to promote local solutions and local entrepreneurship, the idea of large-scale entrepreneurship as a possible solution to poverty had not taken root. It appeared that many a politician, bureaucrat, and manager in large domestic and global firms agreed on one thing: The poor are wards of the state. This implicit agreement was bothersome. The large-scale private sector was only marginally involved in dealing with the problems of 80 percent of humanity. The natural question, therefore, was this: What if we mobilized the resources, scale, and scope of large firms to co-create solutions to the problems at the bottom of the pyramid (BOP), those 4 billion people who live on less than $2 a day? Why can t we mobilize the investment capacity of large firms with the knowledge and commitment of NGOs and the communities that need help? Why can t we co-create unique solutions? That was the beginning of my journey to understand and motivate large firms to imagine and act on their role in creating a more just and humane society by collaborating effectively with other institutions. It was obvious that managers can sustain their enthusiasm and commitment to activities only if they are grounded in good business practices. The four to five billion people at the BOP can help redefine what "good business practice" is. This was not about philanthropy and notions of corporate social responsibility. These initiatives can take the process of engagement between the poor and the large firm only so far. Great contributions can result from these initiatives, but these activities are unlikely to be fully integrated with the core activities of the firm. For sustaining energy, resources, and innovation, the BOP must become a key element of the central mission for large private-sector firms. The poor must become active, informed, and involved consumers. Poverty reduction can result from co-creating a market around the needs of the poor. We have to discard many of the "for and against" views of the world. For example, "are you for globalization or against it" is not a good question. Globalization, like all other major social movements, brings some good and some bad. Similarly, global versus local is not a useful debate. The tensions are real. Very early in my career, I learned that even within the multinational corporation (MNC) that is not a settled debate. Similarly, the debate between small (e.g., microfinance) and large (e.g., multinational firms) is not a useful debate either. Large business can bring efficiency. NGOs can bring creativity to solve the problems that face us all. Certainly, I wanted to avoid the paternalism towards the poor that I saw in NGOs, government agencies, and MNCs. This book is concerned about what works. This is not a debate about who is right. I am even less concerned about what may go wrong. Plenty can and has. I am focused on the potential for learning from the few experiments that are going right. These can show us the way forward. I do not want the poor of the world to become a constituency. I want poverty to be a problem that should be solved. This book is about all of the players NGOs, large domestic firms, MNCs, government agencies, and most importantly, the poor themselves coming together to solve very complex problems that we face as we enter the 21st century. The problem of poverty must force us to innovate, not claim "rights to impose our solutions." The starting point for this transition had to be twofold. First, we should consider the implications of the language we use. "Poverty alleviation" and "the poor" are terms that are loaded with meaning and historical baggage. The focus on entrepreneurial activities as an antidote to the current malaise must focus on an active, underserved consumer community and a potential for global growth in trade and prosperity as the four to five billion poor become part of a system of inclusive capitalism. We should commence talking about underserved consumers and markets. The process must start with respect for Bottom of Pyramid consumers as individuals. The process of co-creation assumes that consumers are equally important joint problem-solvers. Consumers and consumer communities will demand and get choice. This process of creating an involved and activist consumer is already emerging. The BOP provides an opportunity to turbocharge this process of change in the traditional relationship between the firm and the consumer. Second, we must recognize that the conversion of the BOP into an active market is essentially a developmental activity. It is not about serving an existing market more efficiently. New and creative approaches are needed to convert poverty into an opportunity for all concerned. That is the challenge. Once the basic approach was clear, the opportunities became obvious. The new viewpoint showed a different landscape and a focus on early and quiet attempts by some firms to explore this terrain. Unilever and its Indian subsidiary, Hindustan Lever Limited, was one such early experimenter. Around 1997, I found a kindred spirit in colleague Professor Stu Hart at the University of Michigan Business School (UMBS), who was approaching similar problems from a sustainable development perspective. We produced a working paper called "The Strategies for the Bottom of the Pyramid." Needless to say, not a single journal would accept the article for publication. It was too radical. Reviewers thought that it did not follow the work of developmental economists. Nobody noticed that we were offering an alternative to the traditional wisdom of how to alleviate global poverty. Thanks to the Web, various revisions of the working paper circulated freely. Surprisingly, a number of managers read it, accepted its premise, and started to initiate action based on it. Managers at Hewlett-Packard, DuPont, Monsanto, and other corporations started a venture fund and dedicated senior managers time and energy to examine this opportunity. Meanwhile, the Digital Dividend conference organized by Dr. Allen Hammond and the World Resources Institute in Seattle in 1999 provided a forum to examine these ideas in depth. I have not looked back. Since 1997, I have used every possible platform academic, managerial, and governmental to push the idea of the BOP as a market and a source of innovations. During the last five years, slowly at first but now more rapidly, a large number of NGOs, academics, and managers have started to discuss the need for an alternate approach to poverty alleviation and the potential role of the private sector and entrepreneurship as one of the critical elements. The publication of the two articles, "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid," in Strategy+Business (January 2002) with Stu Hart, and "Serve the World s Poor, Profitably" in the Harvard Business Review (September 2002) with Allen Hammond, facilitated the process of widespread discussion within corporations. Today, the discussion is not about "whether" but how fast and where. We have come a long way. In the fall of 2002, several MBA students at the UMBS came to me and said that they would like to work with me on BOP issues and that they were intrigued by the ideas they had seen in print as well as my message in numerous lectures on campus and outside. I was not easily convinced. I imposed extraordinary demands on them to convince me that they really cared. They convinced me overwhelmingly. They were ready to travel, explore opportunities, and endure the painful task of assembling convincing evidence. That was the start of the now widely accepted XMAP projects (a variant of International Multidisciplinary Action Projects IMAP, which UMBS has long supported with faculty mentoring.) The X in XMAP stood for experimental. The enthusiasm of the students, especially Cynthia Casas and Praveen Suthrum, provided the glue and helped see the project through administrative difficulties. I am grateful to all the MBA students whose dedication made this book possible. The book is in three parts. In Part I we develop a framework for the active engagement of the private sector at the BOP. It provides the basis for a profitable win win engagement. The focus is on the nature of changes that all players the large firm, NGOs, governmental agencies, and the poor themselves must accept to make this process work. Part II describes 12 cases, in a wide variety of businesses, where the BOP is becoming an active market and bringing benefits, far beyond just products, to consumers. The cases represent a wide variety of industries from retail, health, and financial services to agribusiness and government. They are located in Peru, Brazil, Nicaragua, Mexico, and India. They represent a wide variety of inst...

《金字塔底端的财富》:深入洞察全球经济的新视角 《金字塔底端的财富》是一部引人入胜的著作,它挑战了我们对贫困和经济发展的传统认知。本书作者以其深刻的洞察力和扎实的实证研究,揭示了一个常常被忽视的庞大消费群体——全球金字塔底端(Bottom of the Pyramid,简称BoP)的亿万消费者。这不仅仅是一本经济学著作,更是一幅描绘新兴市场机遇与挑战的宏伟画卷,一份关于如何实现包容性增长的行动指南。 重新定义“贫困”与“市场” 传统观念将金字塔底端的人们视为依赖援助的对象,他们的存在似乎与市场经济格格不入。然而,《金字塔底端的财富》却打破了这一僵化的视角。作者将目光聚焦于这些生活在每日收入仅几美元水平下的群体,他们并非完全没有购买力,而是拥有着独特的需求、消费习惯和对价值的独特理解。本书认为,这些被低估的消费者群体,实际上构成了未来全球经济增长的重要引擎。理解他们的需求,开发适合他们的产品和服务,不仅能够改善他们的生活水平,更能为企业带来巨大的商业机遇。 发掘未被满足的需求,创造颠覆性创新 作者通过大量的案例研究,生动地展现了如何从金字塔底端未被满足的需求中发掘出创新的火花。这些创新往往是“自下而上”的,它们并非是发达市场高端产品的降级版本,而是根据BoP消费者的实际情况,量身定制的、具有颠覆性的解决方案。 例如,书中可能探讨了如何通过创新的商业模式,以极低的成本提供清洁的水源,如何设计出适合当地环境和支付能力的耐用消费品,如何利用移动通信技术为偏远地区的居民提供金融服务,或者如何开发出能够改善农业生产效率、提高农民收入的低成本技术。这些案例无不说明,真正的创新往往诞生于对复杂问题最直接、最务实的解决方案。 商业模式的革新:普惠与盈利并存 《金字塔底端的财富》不仅关注产品创新,更深入剖析了支撑这些创新的全新商业模式。这些模式常常打破传统的“高价高量”或“低价高量”的二元对立,而是探索“低价、适量、高频”的有效策略。 书中可能详细介绍了如何构建能够触及偏远地区的销售网络,如何利用当地社区资源建立分销体系,如何通过微型融资或预付费模式降低购买门槛,以及如何通过提供附加服务来提升客户忠诚度。这些商业模式的构建,需要企业具备极高的社会责任感、灵活的组织能力以及对当地文化的深刻理解。它们证明了,盈利能力与社会效益并非不可兼得,而是可以通过创新的方式有机地结合起来。 改变全球经济格局的可能性 本书的意义远不止于为企业提供新的增长点。它触及了全球经济格局重塑的深刻议题。当亿万消费者被有效地纳入全球经济体系,他们的消费能力被释放,他们的创造力被激发,整个全球经济的蛋糕将因此而变大。 《金字塔底端的财富》可能探讨了以下几个方面: 减少贫困的有效途径: 通过市场化的手段,而非单纯的慈善捐助,为贫困人口提供持续的经济赋权,是实现可持续减贫的重要途径。 推动全球经济增长的新引擎: BoP市场作为尚未开发的巨大潜力,将成为未来全球经济增长的重要动力。 促进社会公平与包容性发展: 将被边缘化的群体纳入主流经济,不仅能提升他们的福祉,也能构建一个更加公平和包容的社会。 企业社会责任的新内涵: 企业在追求利润的同时,积极参与BoP市场的开发,是对社会责任更深层次的践行。 适用读者 《金字塔底端的财富》适合广泛的读者群体,包括: 企业管理者和创业者: 寻求新的市场机会,学习创新商业模式的企业家们。 政策制定者和政府官员: 致力于制定包容性增长政策,推动经济发展的决策者们。 社会企业家和非营利组织从业者: 寻求更可持续、更具影响力的发展模式的社会创新者们。 经济学和商科领域的学生与学者: 对发展经济学、新兴市场、创新管理等领域感兴趣的研究者们。 任何关心全球发展与社会公平的读者: 希望深入了解全球经济新趋势,为建设更美好的世界贡献力量的有识之士。 结论 《金字塔底端的财富》是一部极具启发性和现实意义的著作。它不仅提供了一种全新的商业思维方式,更指明了一条通往更加繁荣、公平和可持续发展的未来之路。通过深入理解和有效开发金字塔底端的巨大潜能,我们有机会为全球经济注入新的活力,为数亿人的生活带来切实的改变,最终实现一个更加美好的世界。这本书是一次思想的启迪,也是一次行动的号召。

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读后感

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我正在看的是这本书的日文版,因为上次去东京的时候一位关注社会企业的朋友力荐的。日文版还加了一个新的标题,叫做next market,封面也换成了类似MBA学校教材中的插页,大概是担心原来的两个印度老汉玩电脑的设计难以引起‘高端人士的注意’吧。   目前看了一个开头,很厚...

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我正在看的是这本书的日文版,因为上次去东京的时候一位关注社会企业的朋友力荐的。日文版还加了一个新的标题,叫做next market,封面也换成了类似MBA学校教材中的插页,大概是担心原来的两个印度老汉玩电脑的设计难以引起‘高端人士的注意’吧。   目前看了一个开头,很厚...

评分

我正在看的是这本书的日文版,因为上次去东京的时候一位关注社会企业的朋友力荐的。日文版还加了一个新的标题,叫做next market,封面也换成了类似MBA学校教材中的插页,大概是担心原来的两个印度老汉玩电脑的设计难以引起‘高端人士的注意’吧。   目前看了一个开头,很厚...

评分

我正在看的是这本书的日文版,因为上次去东京的时候一位关注社会企业的朋友力荐的。日文版还加了一个新的标题,叫做next market,封面也换成了类似MBA学校教材中的插页,大概是担心原来的两个印度老汉玩电脑的设计难以引起‘高端人士的注意’吧。   目前看了一个开头,很厚...

评分

我正在看的是这本书的日文版,因为上次去东京的时候一位关注社会企业的朋友力荐的。日文版还加了一个新的标题,叫做next market,封面也换成了类似MBA学校教材中的插页,大概是担心原来的两个印度老汉玩电脑的设计难以引起‘高端人士的注意’吧。   目前看了一个开头,很厚...

用户评价

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读完之后,久久不能平静的,是对其潜在影响力的深思。这本书没有提供廉价的万能解药,它坦诚地揭示了复杂问题的根源,并提出了一个需要长期、系统性努力才能实现的方向。它没有给我们一个轻易就能抓住的“黄金果实”,而是描绘了一张通往宝藏的藏宝图,并且明确指出了图上标记的难度和潜在的风险。这种不迎合大众对速成解决方案的渴望的态度,反而更显其高贵和负责。它像一剂清醒剂,让人从不切实际的幻想中抽离出来,转而关注真正具有建设性的、需要耐心和远见卓识的行动方案。合上书页的那一刻,我的脑海中萦绕的不是某个具体的口号,而是一系列新的问题和亟待解决的实际操作层面的挑战,这才是真正优秀的作品所能带来的持久震撼——它改变了你提问的方式,而非仅仅给出了一个答案。

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论证的深度和广度,是这本书区别于普通读物的重要标志。它显然是建立在扎实的第一手资料和多年的潜心研究之上,每一个观点背后似乎都有着难以计数的田野调查和数据支撑。然而,最了不起的是,作者非常克制地展示这些“硬核”的支撑材料,它没有将研究报告直接搬运过来,而是巧妙地将这些数据和案例“熔铸”在了流畅的论述之中。你感觉到的不是被数据淹没,而是被精准的证据所说服。书中引用的例证,无论是地域上的多样性还是行业上的跨度,都展现出作者广博的学识储备和不倦的探索精神。这种深厚的学术功底与清晰的表达能力相结合,使得这本书的结论具有极强的说服力和权威性,但其语气却始终保持着一种谦逊和开放,没有丝毫的教条主义倾向,鼓励读者在吸收其洞见的同时,也进行自身的批判性思考。

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我必须承认,最初翻开这本书时,我对它抱持着一种略微审慎的态度,毕竟市面上充斥着太多故作高深的理论著作。然而,这本书在叙事结构上的巧妙安排,迅速打消了我的疑虑。它并非那种平铺直叙、堆砌术语的教科书式写作,而是采取了一种非常流畅、近乎散文诗般的笔法来构建它的核心论点。作者似乎深谙如何将复杂的问题“去魅”,用一种极其生活化、充满画面感的语言娓娓道来。每一章的过渡都处理得极其自然,仿佛是不同场景之间的镜头切换,上一段的思考自然而然地引出了下一段的探索,逻辑链条严密却不生硬。这种叙事节奏的把控力,简直像一位经验丰富的大师在引导你穿越一片迷雾,每一步都踩在坚实的路基上,让你既能感受到探索的乐趣,又始终保有安全感。它更像是一场精心编排的旅程,而不是一份冷冰冰的报告,阅读过程中我几乎不需要停下来查阅背景资料,一切都在故事流淌中得到了合理的铺陈和解释。

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这本书的视角转换能力极其出色,这一点让我印象最为深刻。作者似乎拥有“上帝视角”与“个体体验”之间自由切换的魔力。在宏观层面,它能以极其宏大的视野去审视一个巨大的社会现象,分析其背后的结构性矛盾和历史脉络,那种洞察力令人拍案叫绝。然而,就在你为这种宏大叙事感到敬畏时,作者又会突然将镜头拉近,聚焦于某个小人物的真实挣扎、一次微不足道的日常互动,将冰冷的理论瞬间具象化为有温度的生命体验。这种“大象无形,细微见真章”的处理方式,让那些抽象的概念拥有了鲜活的血肉。这种多维度的观察,避免了理论作品常见的“高大全”或“过于琐碎”的弊病,使得整本书读起来既有深厚的思想底蕴,又不失人情味和共鸣感。它迫使我跳出我惯常的思维定势,从多个完全不同的角度去审视同一个现实困境。

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这本书的装帧设计着实令人眼前一亮,那种低调的奢华感从拿到手的第一刻起就弥漫开来。封面选用的纸张质地厚实,带着微妙的纹理,即便是反复摩挲也丝毫不会显得廉价。色彩搭配上,设计师显然是下了番功夫,深邃的底色与封面上那几处留白的处理达到了完美的平衡,既沉稳又不失活力。特别是书脊的处理,字体镌刻得清晰有力,即便是在拥挤的书架上也显得格外突出。内页的印刷质量同样值得称赞,墨迹均匀,字号大小适中,阅读起来非常舒适,即便是长时间沉浸其中,眼睛也不会感到疲劳。装帧的细节之处,比如扉页上的小插图,虽然不起眼,却透露出一种对内容的尊重和对读者的体贴,让人感觉到这本书不仅仅是一堆文字的集合,更是一件值得珍藏的艺术品。装帧上的用心程度,无疑为阅读体验打下了坚实的基础,它预示着内部的内容同样经过了精心雕琢,让人对即将展开的文字世界充满了期待和敬意。这种对物理形态的极致追求,在如今这个电子书盛行的时代,显得尤为珍贵和难得,成功地在读者心中建立了起一种仪式感。

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刚买的,还没来得及读

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其实只看了三分之二。反正I4H课也恶梦了,不想再看下去了。只是它论证了一个观点,挣钱和扶贫不是矛盾对立的,是可以双赢的

评分

还是原版的信息完整,中文版的翻译太烂了,略去了众多关键信息!

评分

其实只看了三分之二。反正I4H课也恶梦了,不想再看下去了。只是它论证了一个观点,挣钱和扶贫不是矛盾对立的,是可以双赢的

评分

其实只看了三分之二。反正I4H课也恶梦了,不想再看下去了。只是它论证了一个观点,挣钱和扶贫不是矛盾对立的,是可以双赢的

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