Nikolaus Lang is Managing Director and Senior Partner at Boston Consulting Group, Global Leader of the BCG Henderson Institute, and the Global Vice Chair for the firm’s Global Advantage Practice.
Nikolaus was also named a BHI Fellow in 2016, focused on researching collaboration in the digital age and the crucial role that cross-border joint ventures, alliances, and business ecosystems play.
Nikolaus is an author of Beyond Great published by Public Affairs and the founder and director of BCG’s Center for Mobility Innovation, a team of urban mobility experts and digital business builders advising cities, public transportation operators, and mobility and automotive companies around the globe as they create innovative and state-of-the-art mobility solutions.
He is a frequent speaker on these topics speaking at events such as The Economist in addition to C-suite events of Fortune 500 clients. His work has been published in leading publications including The World Economic Forum and Harvard Business Review, among others.
Nikolaus S. Lang explores the rise of a multipolar world by 2030 and offers insights to help business leaders navigate the shifting geopolitical landscape.
Great is no longer good enough. Beyond Great delivers a powerful new playbook of 9 core strategies to thrive in a post-COVID world where all the rules of the game are being re-written.
Geopolitical disruptions and tech advances are shaking up manufacturing strategies, pushing leaders to rethink their approaches. Companies need to rethink the way they traditionally decide where to locate plants, and instead utilize scenario planning and the possibility of automation to create a manufacturing footprint that makes sense as tariffs rise.
From trade wars and geopolitical shifts to regional wars and climate change, business leaders must manage through unprecedented complexity in the global landscape.
"We need to think more in terms of understanding time. On the firm side, productivity improvements [usually mean] speeding up processes. […] For consumers, […] our budget is 24 hours, which we use on leisure, paid and unpaid work, consumption, services. Time could [be] the basis of a new accounting framework for economic value."
"A bomb works quite well to blow things up, but it doesn’t always get you what you want politically. And I think the same applies to sanctions: […] the US government does have the power to impose significant economic harm on any country in the world. What we’re much less good at is translating that economic pain into the political objectives that we seek."
Competition over AI development is contributing to technological fragmentation globally. But boards can help their management teams anticipate threats and increase resilience.
Why government — not business — will see that AI startups get the money they need.
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