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Book details for Competing on Internet Time: Lessons From Netscape & Its Battle with Microsoft Buy Competing on Internet Time: Lessons From Netscape & Its Battle with Microsoft
Competing on Internet Time: Lessons From Netscape & Its Battle with Microsoft
Book author(s) Book subject

Michael Cusumano David Yoffie

e-Business

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Competing on Internet Time: Lessons From Netscape & Its Battle with Microsoft

Brief description of Competing on Internet Time: Lessons From Netscape & Its Battle with Microsoft

No other business rivalry has captured the public imagination quite like the one between Netscape and Microsoft. And for good reason. It pits the world's richest corporation against a relatively recent startup. The implications of this battle--for everything from electronic commerce to network communications--extend well into the next millennium. Competing on Internet Time, by Michael A. Cusumano and David B. Yoffie, is the definitive blow-by-blow analysis of Netscape's battle with Microsoft, starting with the founding of Netscape in 1994 through the summer of 1998, just as Microsoft was about to enter the courtroom with the Justice department over its alleged monopolistic practices.

Based on a series of interviews with Netscape employees and others, Competing on Internet Time is more than a breathless corporate biography. Rather, the authors draw lessons from the mistakes and victories that both Netscape and Microsoft have suffered and enjoyed in their war for 'Net turf--in terms of browsers, server software, and portal space. The authors come up with some surprising conclusions. For example, in examining the competitive strategies of both companies, Cusumano and Yoffie conclude that Microsoft, more than Netscape, exhibited what they call a "judo flexibility." Here they point to Microsoft's now famous December 7, 1995 Internet Day announcement of the company's embrace-and-extend strategy and its subsequent sacrifice of MSN in a deal with AOL--prime examples of how Microsoft redefined the battle in a way that avoided a direct confrontation with Netscape but nevertheless placed them center stage in the fight for Internet mindshare. The authors also go into fascinating detail about how each company operates--from the hiring of staffers to the conception, development, and marketing of products.

But this book is more than just about the conflict between Netscape and Microsoft. Anyone interested in how network-based businesses grow and change will find Competing on Internet Time a glimpse into the not-too-distant network economy. It belongs on the bookshelf of every Internet junkie and entrepreneur. --Harry C. Edwards

Competing on Internet time means competitive advantage can be won and lost overnight. In this penetrating analysis of strategy-making and product innovation in the dynamic markets of commercial cyberspace, bestselling Microsoft Secrets co-author Michael Cusumano and top competitive strategy expert David Yoffie draw vital lessons from Netscape, the first pure Internet company, and show how it employs the techniques of "judo strategy" in its pitched battle with Microsoft, the world's largest software producer.

With a new afterword updating the events of the year following publication of the hardcover edition, Competing on Internet Time is essential and instructive reading for all managers, engineers, and entrepreneurs who want to succeed in ultra-fast-paced markets. Managers in every high-tech industry will discover a wealth of new ideas on how to create and scale up a new company quickly; how to compete in fast-paced, unpredictable industries; and how to design products for rapidly evolving markets.When Marc Andreessen and Jim Clark founded Netscape in 1994, they were the first to envision how the Internet could revolutionize conventional ways of using computers, distributing software, communicating with other people, and conducting business. Now managers in similar industries will discover how Netscape -- the first pure Internet and World Wide Web company, designs and creates basic web products and develops strategies to compete with its two giant rivals. Just as Michael Cusumano's highly praised Microsoft Secrets opened up the inner workings of that company, so Competing on Internet Time exposes the very heart of Netscape -- based on 40 extensive interviews with key officers and employees of the firm. Managers everywhere will want to absorb these valuable lessons from the fastest growing software company in history and put them to work in their organizations now -- before the competition does.

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