<p>“Professors Kvint and Bodrunov provide terrific insights on societal transformation through strategic development. The book is very unique, and a must read for anyone involved in strategy implementation. Information and technology have been instrumental in our current environment, and the book is exceptional in how a society can be transformed through applying strategic concepts with “noonomy”—transformation through technological change. This book is a delightful addition to the strategy literature.”<br /><br />—Y. Joseph Ugras, Interim Dean, La Salle University School of Business, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA</p>
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Dr. Vladimir Kvint is a worldwide leading expert in strategy and the processes of strategizing. He is a US Fulbright Scholar with about 50 years of experience in this field. He has been a professor at Fordham University, NYU, the American University in Washington D.C., La Salle University, Moscow State University’s Moscow School of Economics, Vienna Economic University, and others. He has consulted for leading industrial and high-tech companies around the world, including General Electric, Transamerica, the architectural and planning firm RMJM, Arthur Andersen, etc. In addition, he has consulted and created strategies for heads of states and governments in several countries. His books have been translated and published in 18 countries, including Albania, China, Germany, Great Britain, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, the United States, Uzbekistan, and others. He has also published many articles in Forbes Magazine, Harvard Business Review, and other magazines.
Dr. Sergey D. Bodrunov is the author of the book Noonomy, which received the Distinguished Achievement Award for Political Economy in the Twenty-First Century by The World Association for Political Economy (WAPE) at the WAPE Forum in Berlin (16-19 of July 2018). In the field of reindustrialization and the development of human civilization, Dr. Bodrunov has published research that was translated in several countries and discussed at many international conferences, including at the universities of Beijing, Berlin, Cambridge, Moscow, New York, Paris, Saint Petersburg, Vienna, and many other world centers of economic thought.