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...premier corporate consulting firms. “I’ve applied to the top places,” he says. “If I get into them, it’ll be worth it for me to do it rather than what I love.” Geoffrey S. Johnston ’07 also figures prominently in the Harvard theater community, but he plans to leave that role behind when he graduates. The producer, actor, and HRDC board member is looking for a job in management consulting. Johnston says for-profit consulting firms are a better bridge...

Author: By Richard S. Beck and Alexander B. Fabry, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: The Business of Art, The Art of Business | 10/26/2006 | See Source »

...Experts on innovation - including Geoffrey Moore, a managing director at TCG Advisors in San Mateo, Calif., whose book, Crossing the Chasm, has shaped Segway?s strategy for conquering the recalcitrant market-point out that there are just too many little problems associated with owning a Segway to make the $5,000 you pay to own one seem worthwhile. (Where do you park it? Where can you ride it without angering pedestrians?) In any case, for most urbanites, hopping on a bike or simply walking a little more seems a fine alternative to shelling out so much money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What the Recall Reveals About Segway | 9/14/2006 | See Source »

...Geoffrey Moore, a managing director at TCG Advisors in San Mateo, Calif., whose book, Crossing the Chasm, has shaped Segway's strategy, raises other concerns. There's simply too much "pain" associated with its use, he says, to make the gains derived from owning it seem worthwhile. Average consumers, he explains, will worry about such things as the etiquette of Segway use. (Where can it be driven? Or safely parked? Can it be brought into the office? Left in the lobby?) Though any one such concern is minor, he says, together they have a multiplicative effect. "It's like Gulliver...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Segway Riddle | 8/14/2006 | See Source »

Such amenities, designers believe, prove that downsizing doesn't mean downscale. "When you build smaller, you can put in a lot more quality than you can in a larger space," says Geoffrey Warner of Alchemy Architects in St. Paul, Minn. Warner's weeHouses, shaped something like shipping containers, start at $69,500 for a 364-sq.-ft. studio with bamboo flooring, built-in cabinetry and floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors. Far less conventional is the Rotorhaus, created by German designer Luigi Colani. A single-model prototype, the Rotorhaus features a rotating central unit containing a bedroom, bathroom and kitchen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Shrinking Down the House | 8/14/2006 | See Source »

...Springvale homestead, an hour's drive from Halls Creek, was the home of legendary cattleman and bush poet Tom Quilty. Until the 1886 gold rush, the station was one of this region's few inhabited places. Historian Geoffrey Blainey described men with gold lust traveling the final 1,000 km from Katherine. "The manager of Spring Vale reported that 'great numbers of men from Queensland have passed by, some of them very undesirable characters, who prefer picking their own beef and horse-flesh,'" he writes in The Rush That Never Ended. "They faked the brands on their stolen horses with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Grass Into T-Bones | 8/7/2006 | See Source »

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