EBS BUSINESS INSIGHT

Insight features short articles, expert commentary, thought leadership pieces, and popular essays related to contemporary business issues, management trends, leadership development, and emerging market strategies. This section is ideal for readers seeking accessible and practical knowledge that reflects real-world business perspectives and ongoing transformative change.

Why Expertise Alone

Why Expertise Alone Is No Longer Enough

For much of modern professional history, expertise represented the primary foundation of career success. Individuals developed specialized knowledge, accumulated experience, and built reputations based on mastery within defined domains. Organizations relied on experts to provide certainty, solve complex problems, and guide decision making. Expertise was not only valued, it was

Read More »
Professional Growth

Professional Growth in an Age of Uncertainty

Professional growth was once closely associated with stability. Career progression followed relatively clear paths, experience accumulated predictably, and advancement often depended on tenure and specialization. In today’s environment, uncertainty has reshaped these assumptions. Industries evolve rapidly, job roles transform, and skills that were once valuable can lose relevance within a

Read More »
The Myth of Work Life Balance

The Myth of Work-Life Balance in Modern Professional Life

Work-life balance has become one of the most widely discussed concepts in modern professional life. Organizations promote it as a solution to stress, burnout, and declining well-being, while individuals pursue it as a way to maintain productivity without sacrificing personal fulfillment. The underlying assumption is simple: work and life exist

Read More »
Professional Survival Skill

Lifelong Learning as a Professional Survival Skill

For much of the past, professional success was built on acquiring expertise early and applying it consistently throughout a career. Education provided foundational knowledge, experience reinforced competence, and stability allowed professionals to rely on accumulated skills over long periods. Today, this model is increasingly outdated. Technological advancement, evolving industries, and

Read More »
Designing Organization for Learning

Designing Organizations for Learning, Not Stability

For much of modern organizational history, companies were designed with stability as the primary objective. Structures emphasized control, predictability, and efficiency. Roles were clearly defined, processes were standardized, and success depended on minimizing variation. This design logic reflected an environment where change occurred slowly and competitive advantage could be sustained

Read More »
Change Management in The Age

Change Management in the Age of Continuous Change

For many years, change management was approached as a temporary organizational process. Change initiatives were launched in response to specific events such as restructuring, technology implementation, or market shifts. Once the initiative was completed, organizations expected to return to stability. This model assumed that change was episodic and manageable within

Read More »

Organizational Excellence Is a System, Not a Department

Many organizations treat organizational excellence as a function assigned to a specific department or initiative. Quality teams, performance units, or operational excellence divisions are established with the expectation that excellence can be managed centrally and implemented across the organization. While such structures can support improvement efforts, they often create a

Read More »
Why Performance Management

Why Performance Management Often Reduces Performance

Performance management systems were introduced with a clear intention: to improve organizational results by clarifying expectations, measuring outcomes, and aligning individual contributions with strategic objectives. In theory, structured evaluation and feedback should enhance accountability and productivity. Yet in practice, many organizations experience the opposite outcome. Performance management processes become bureaucratic,

Read More »
Why Digital Transformation Fails Without Mindset Transformation

Why Digital Transformation Fails Without Mindset Transformation

Digital transformation has become a central priority for organizations across industries. Investments in new technologies, data systems, automation, and digital platforms are often presented as necessary steps toward competitiveness and future readiness. Yet despite significant financial commitment, many digital transformation initiatives fail to deliver expected outcomes. Systems are implemented, processes

Read More »