Business Prophet   How strategy guru C.K. Prahalad is  changing the way CEOs 
think

Take a cab ride through Bombay, and these are the  scenes that will likely 
strike you first: raggedly dressed homeless families  sprawled on blankets 
amid shacks. Traffic hopelessly clogged with every manner  of soot-belching 
vehicle and wooden cart. Gaunt hawkers and beggars tapping on  your window at 
red lights. For foreign visitors, such jarring images of poverty  and 
desperation are hard to shake.

View those same streets through the  eyes of C.K. Prahalad, however, and they 
become a beehive of entrepreneurialism  and creativity. "I see the positives 
inside the muck," says Prahalad as he  settles his stocky frame into the back 
of a hired Tata Indica sedan to conduct a  quick tour of Bombay. As the car 
crawls through congested Mohamed Ali Road, he  notes that virtually every 
individual is engaged in a business of some kind --  whether it is selling 
single cloves of garlic, squeezing sugar cane juice for  pennies a glass, or 
hauling TVs.

On every block he points out the  intriguing enterprises tucked into the 
nooks and crannies. With the world's  cheapest telecom rates, "all you need 
here is a phone and a $20 card to start a  business," he explains in his 
measured baritone. He notices a busy closet-sized  shop charging a few pennies 
per page to send faxes. "That guy probably started  with a single phone and 
then added a fax and printer. Now he has a  self-contained communications 
center offering extremely low prices." Such  entrepreneurs, he contends, 
pioneered cheap pay-per-use services long before  they became a fad in the 
West. The car stops at a small dry-goods shop. Prahalad  bounds out and asks 
the owner to let him behind the counter. Tiny 5 cents  single-serve containers 
of shampoo, soap, toothpaste, and other household goods  dangle from the walls 
and ceiling. He notes the brands: Head & Shoulders,  Lifebuoy, Pears, Colgate, 
Lux. "Low quality won't sell," he says.

By the  end of an hour it's hard to look at Bombay and its impoverished 
citizens in the  same way. That's exactly what Prahalad, 64, intended. The 
University of Michigan  professor's knack for being able to change people's 
perceptions of the world  around them has made Prahalad an incredibly 
influential corporate strategist. He  has built a lucrative consulting career 
helping such multinationals as Citibank,  Philips, and Philip Morris break out 
of ingrained mind-sets and craft new  business models. Prahalad and colleague 
Gary Hamel helped spark a management  revolution in the 1990s with their idea 
of "core competence," which says that  companies must identify and focus on 
their competitive strengths. Their 1994  book, Competing for the Future, is 
regarded as a classic. A decade later  he co-wrote The Future of Competition, 
which argued that the traditional  "company-centric" approach to product 
innovation is giving way to a world in  which companies "co-create" products 
with consumers. That book gave Prahalad a  reputation among designers. At the 
same time, he has been working to convince  executives that today's needy 
masses, so often dismissed as subsisting largely  outside of the global 
economy, are actually its future. Prahalad's 2004 work on  that topic, The 
Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, has been hailed as  one of the most 
important business books in recent years and turned Prahalad  into a celebrity 
in the field of international development.

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