SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  46
21 FROM 21
THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 2021
greatesthitsblog.com
 A library of over 450 books
 A blog
 A series of printed books
 One-page summaries
 One-sentence summaries
 Training programmes
 Motivational speeches
 A fertile source of new ideas
greatesthitsblog.com
You can make sense of a
complex world by carrying out
quick plausibility tests,
understanding how numbers
are reported and separating
experts from pseudo-experts.
greatesthitsblog.com
• We live in a world of information overload. Facts and figures on absolutely
everything are at our fingertips, but are too often biased, distorted or outright lies.
In a world where anyone can become an expert at the click of a button, being able
to see through the tricks played with statistics is more necessary than ever before.
• We need to ask ourselves: (a) Can we really know that? and (b) How do they
know that? Doing this effectively allows us to evaluate numbers, words, and the
world generally.
• Statistics are not facts. They are interpretations, because people gather statistics.
Sometimes the numbers are simply wrong Always ask yourself whether a claim is
broadly plausible. Look at how the numbers were collected, interpreted and
presented graphically.
• There are three ways of calculating an average, and they often yield different
numbers. People with statistical acumen usually avoid the word average in favour
of the more precise:
1. Mean: add up all the observations or reports and divide by the number of
observations or reports.
2. Median: the middle number in a set of numbers (half of the observations are
above it, and half below)
3. Mode: the value that occurs most often.
• Many graphs mislead and distort with a variety of tricks, including not labelling the
axes, truncating the vertical axis, and messing around with scale. They can be
made to tell almost any story.
• How numbers are collected is essential to whether they tell an accurate story.
greatesthitsblog.com
Find focus, transform
productivity and improve
communication by reimagining
work in the age of overload.
greatesthitsblog.com
• Email reduces productivity, makes us miserable and has a mind of its
own, so let’s get rid of it.
• In 2019 the average worker was sending and receiving 126 business
emails a day – about one every four minutes.
• The Hyperactive Hive Mind is a workflow centred around ongoing
conversation fuelled by unstructured messages delivered through digital
communication tools like email and instant messenger services.
• Constant interruptions have a switching cost and leave attention
residue, making it harder to concentrate on the next thing. The best
workflows minimize mid-task context switches and minimize the sense
of communication overload.
• The Attention Capital Principle states that the productivity of the
knowledge sector can be significantly increased if we identify workflows
that better optimize the human brain’s ability to sustainably add value to
information.
• The Process Principle states that introducing smart production
processes to knowledge work can dramatically increase performance
and make the work less draining.
• The Protocol Principle states that designing rules that optimize when
and how coordination occurs in the workplace is a pain in the short term
but can result in significantly more productive operation in the long term.
• The Specialization Principle states that in the knowledge sector, working
on fewer things, but doing each thing with more quality and
accountability, can be the foundation for significantly more productivity.
greatesthitsblog.com
CATALYST
Using personal chemistry to
convert contacts into contracts
works better than spreadsheets
and pestering.
ems.
greatesthitsblog.com
CATALYST
• This book is all about prospecting for and winning new business. Good business
developers know how to create chemistry with the people they meet. They catalyse a
positive reaction from strangers when they connect.
• Diligent farmers are the best model for business developers to adopt. They nurture other
peoples’ interests and then reap the benefit when the appropriate time comes.
• By contrast, sales dogs and spreadsheet bureaucrats generate a lot of online and
meeting activity but don’t do as well. Interestingly, 80% of sales require five follow-up
calls after the meeting but 44% of sales representatives give up after one follow-up.
• Stop trying to control your networking universe. It works best when you let it be its
natural state: random. Show up and keep showing up because you never know who you
will meet and what might happen.
• It’s all about developing chemistry – how you make them feel.
• Beware of charmers at networking events who want a contact or a sale but are only
interested in themselves. They are called ANTHONYs:
All about me
Not interested in you
That reminds me of something I did that is a lot more interesting than what you did
Happy to talk over you
Over your shoulder is someone far more useful to me (scanning the room)
Never follow up or say thank you if you help them
You are now, apparently, one of 500 of their closest friends
• Being helpful is the aim. Help the prospect identify their real needs, expand them, and
create new ones. Approaches to a prospect should be completely customised every time
– do not cut and paste from previous efforts.
greatesthitsblog.com
It is
Although arguments appear
to be tearing us apart, conflict
can bring us together if
approached in the right way.
greatesthitsblog.com
The author’s rules for productive argument are:
1. First, connect: Before getting to the content of the disagreement, establish a
relationship of trust.
2. Let go of the rope: To disagree well, you have to give up on trying to control what
the other person thinks or feels.
3. Give face: Disagreements become toxic when they become status battles. The
skilful disagreer makes every effort to make their adversary feel good about
themselves.
4. Check your weirdness: Behind many disagreements is a clash of cultures that
seems strange to each other. Don’t assume that you are the normal one.
5. Get curious: The rush to judgement stops us listening and learning. Instead of
trying to win the argument, try and be interested – and interesting.
6. Make wrong strong: Mistakes can be positive if you apologize rapidly and
authentically. They enable you to show humility, which can strengthen the
relationship and ease the conversation.
7. Disrupt the script: Hostile arguments get locked into simple and predictable
patterns. To make the disagreement more productive, introduce novelty and
variation. Be surprising.
8. Share constraints: Disagreement benefits from a set of agreed norms and
boundaries that support self-expression. Rules create freedom.
9. Only get mad on purpose: No amount of theorising can fully prepare for the
emotional experience of a disagreement. Sometimes your worst adversary is
yourself.
10. Golden rule: Be real: All rules are subordinate to the golden rule: make an
honest human connection. greatesthitsblog.com
Conscious leaders can operate
in a way that is beneficial to
purpose, pragmatism and
profit.
greatesthitsblog.com
• This is all about elevating humanity through business. The author is the CEO of Whole
Foods Market, and here he proposes a road map for values-based leadership:
Vision & Virtue Conscious leaders:
1. Put purpose first – not just profit, but the value that can be contributed to the world.
2. Lead with love – an opportunity to serve and uplift people and communities. This is
servant leadership. Types of love can include generosity gratitude, appreciation, care,
competition and forgiveness.
3. Always act with integrity – holding themselves to the highest standards. Types of
integrity include telling the truth, acting with honour and integrity, being authentic,
having the courage to do the right thing, and being trustworthy.
Mindset & Strategy
1. Find win-win-win solutions – both parties win, and the community. This could be in
many contexts, including family, city, state, nation, humans and animals generally, or
the state of the biosphere.
2. Innovate and create value – build cultures that nurture and liberate the creative spirit.
Create the right incentives, encourage healthy competition, start a conspiracy (make
innovators think they are in on a secret), embrace the edges, and celebrate innovation
as it happens.
3. Think long term – about the impact of their actions and choices. Pre-mortems guess
what will go wrong before it does. Ask: what really matters? What risks are worth
taking?
People & Culture
1. Constantly evolve the team – are sensitive to the culture around them.
2. Regularly revitalise – renewing their own physical, mental, emotional and spiritual
energy.
3. Continually learn and grow – personally and professionally. greatesthitsblog.com
There’s a myth that creativity is
something that you have to be
born with but this isn’t the case
– anyone can be creative.
greatesthitsblog.com
• You might think that creativity is some mysterious, rare gift – one that only a few
possess. That’s not true. It’s a skill that anyone can acquire.
• Creativity is simply new ways of thinking about things. It is not the sole preserve
of the arts. It can be seen in every area of life.
• Your unconscious works on stuff all the time, without you being conscious of it,
and even when you think it isn’t. If you put the work in on a problem before
going to bed, an idea will usually present itself the following morning.
• Our intelligent unconscious is astoundingly powerful. It allows us to perform
most of our tasks in life without requiring us to concentrate on them. Put simply,
you can’t ask your unconscious a question and expect a direct answer – a neat,
tidy little verbal message - because the language of the unconscious is not
verbal.
• In Hare Brain, Tortoise Mind, author Guy Claxton talks about two different ways
of thinking:
1. Hare Brain: figuring matters out, weighing up the pros and cons,
constructing arguments and solving problems. Quick and purposeful.
2. Tortoise Mind: proceeds more slowly, less purposeful and clear-cut, more
playful, leisurely or dreamy. Meditative and pondering.
• Crucially the Tortoise Mind, for all its apparent aimlessness, is just as ‘intelligent’
as the much faster Hare Brain.
greatesthitsblog.com
Not everything has to be so
hard – you can make it easier
to do what matters most.
greatesthitsblog.com
• You can make it easier to focus by creating an effortless state, concentrating on
effortless action and getting the highest return on the least effort.
• In an exhausting approach, you think that anything worth doing takes
tremendous effort, you try too hard, overcomplicate, overengineer, overthink and
overdo, and so what you get is burnout and none of the results you want.
• In an effortless approach, you realise that the most essential things can be the
easiest ones, you find the easier path, and get the right results without burning
out.
• To achieve this, start with:
– Invert: what if this could be easy?
– Enjoy: what if this could be fun?
– Release: let go and enjoy the relief
– Rest: consider the art of doing nothing
– Notice: see things clearly for what they are
• Effortless action involves:
– Define: what ‘done’ looks like
– Start: work out the first obvious action
– Simplify: start with zero and take it from there
– Progress: have the courage to be rubbish
– Pace: slow is smooth, smooth is fast
• For effortless results:
– Learn: leverage the best of what others know
– Lift: harness the strength of other people’s views and efforts
– Automate: do it once and never again
– Trust: the engine of high-leverage teams
– Prevent: solve the problem before it happens
– Now: what happens next matters most greatesthitsblog.com
Figuring out how to get all the
benefits of cheap, reliable
power without greenhouse gas
emissions (through investment
and innovation) is the single
most important thing we must
do to avoid a climate disaster.
greatesthitsblog.com
• There are two numbers you need to know about climate change. The first is 51
billion. The other is zero. 51 billion is how many tons of greenhouse gases the
world typically adds to the atmosphere every year. Zero is what we need to aim
for (to stop the warming and avoid the worst effects of climate change).
• There is no scenario in which we keep adding carbon to the atmosphere and the
world stops getting hotter. And the hotter it gets, the harder it will be for humans
to survive, much less thrive. 1/5 of carbon dioxide emitted today will still be there
in 10,000 years.
• It is estimated that Covid reduced emissions to 48 or 49 billion tons of carbon – a
reduction of around 5%. But consider what it took to achieve this 5%. A million
people have died, and tens of millions have been put out of work. Not a situation
that people would want to continue or repeat.
• The author acknowledges he is an ‘imperfect messenger’ and that he can easily
be seen as just ‘another rich guy with an opinion’. He came to focus on climate
change in an indirect way – through the problem of energy poverty, which was
highlighted work at the Gates Foundation. Their motto is ‘Everyone deserves the
chance to live a healthy and productive life’.
• Here lies a major tension. Is it fair to tell someone from a poor area of India that
their children can’t have lights to study by (because they can’t afford green
energy), or that thousands could die in heat waves because installing air
conditioners is bad for the environment?
• Gates asserts: it would be immoral and impractical to try to stop people who are
lower down on the economic ladder from climbing up.
• We need to accomplish something gigantic we have never done before, much
faster than we have ever done anything similar. Figuring out how to get all the
benefits of cheap, reliable electricity without greenhouse gas emissions is the
single most important thing we must do to avoid a climate disaster. greatesthitsblog.com
With the right approach it is
possible to evaluate
confidently the claims that
surround us.
greatesthitsblog.com
• The book contains ten rules for thinking differently about numbers, plus one golden
rule. They are:
• Search your feelings: how does this make me feel, and why? Check your emotional
reaction.
• Ponder your personal experience: take the worm’s eye view (personal) as well as
the bird’s eye view (statistical).
• Avoid premature enumeration: don’t take numbers at face value – establish what is
really being counted.
• Step back and enjoy the view: ask yourself: is that a big number? Put the claim into
context and look for comparisons.
• Get the back story: look behind the statistics to find out where they came from.
• Ask who is missing: not all data is comprehensive. Would our view be different if we
knew more?
• Demand transparency when the computer says no: what algorithm was used and
how accurate and helpful is it? Without intelligent openness big datasets cannot be
trusted.
• Don’t take statistical bedrock for granted: most official statistics can be trusted, but
many others can’t.
• Remember that misinformation can be beautiful too: beware misleading graphs and
charts – they can be designed to prove pretty much anything, so check that you
understand what the axes actually mean. The smarter they are, the more
suspicious you should be.
• Keep an open mind: how might I be mistaken, and have the facts changes since?
• +. The golden rule. Be curious: look deeper and ask questions. greatesthitsblog.com
Long hours, excessive
workloads and functioning with
a lack of sleep should be marks
of stupidity, not badges of
honour.
greatesthitsblog.com
• This book is a direct attack on the chaos, anxiety and stress that hamper billions of
workers every day. The answer to better productivity isn’t more hours – it’s less waste
and fewer things that induce distraction and persistent stress. It’s time to stop
celebrating ‘crazy’ and start celebrating ‘calm’.
• Things that don’t work include 80-hour weeks, packed schedules, endless meetings,
an overflowing inbox, unrealistic deadlines, Sunday afternoon emails, being stuck at
the office, having no time to think, and throwing all-nighters.
• You can still operate a perfectly successful business in 8-hour days, 40-hour weeks,
with plenty of time to yourself, comfortably paced days, no weekend work, no rushing,
realistic deadlines, no knee-jerk reactions, a great night’s sleep, ample autonomy, and
the ability to work from anywhere.
• There are two primary reasons why ‘crazy’ has become ‘the new normal’:
• 1. The workday is being sliced into tiny, fleeting work moments by an onslaught of
physical and visual distractions.
• 2. An unhealthy obsession with growth at any cost sets towering, unrealistic
expectations that stress people out.
• The authors are advocates of calm, which means protecting people’s time and
attention, working 40 hours a week, reasonable expectations, ample time off, and
meetings as a last resort.
• The business world is obsessed with fighting and winning. It’s a zero-sum world in
which they conquer market share rather than earn it, capture customers rather than
serve them. They target customers, pick their battles and make a killing.
greatesthitsblog.com
Courageous companies
thrive by giving more
than they take.
greatesthitsblog.com
• A net positive company improves the lives of everyone it touches, takes ownership
of all the social and environmental impacts its business model creates, and partners
with competitors, civil society and governments to drive transformative change that
no single group or enterprise could deliver alone.
• Our current economic system has two fundamental weaknesses: it’s based on
unlimited growth on a finite planet, and it benefits a small number of people, not
everyone. The ultimate question is: Is the world better off because your business is
in it? Fundamental principles include:
• You break the world, you own it (just like an item in a shop)
• You need to care, and be courageous
• Unlock the company’s soul (discover organizational and employee purpose and
passion – go back to their roots to understand original purpose)
• Blow up boundaries (by thinking big and setting aggressive net positive goals – if a
goal is not making you uncomfortable, it’s not aggressive enough. Achievable and
Realistic elements of SMART objectives are therefore not good enough because
they lack ambition.)
• Be an open book (by building trust and transparency)
• Create partnerships with synergies and multiplier effects: 1+1=11 (Companies
should not be one-upping their competitors on shared challenges – they should be
precompetitive so that the whole category wins)
• Embrace the elephants (manage issues that no one wants to talk about, such as
paying taxes, corruption, overpaying executives, human rights, lobbying etc.)
• Put the values into action – deep in the organization and brands
• Be even more responsible for broader impacts (do more good), challenge
consumption and growth, rethink measures of success such as GDP, improve
social contracts, defend the pillars of society and pursue a higher moral ground)
greatesthitsblog.com
Noise causes flaws in human
judgement and if ignored it can
come at a great cost to
individuals and organizations.
greatesthitsblog.com
• Noise produces errors in many fields including medicine, law, public health,
economic forecasting, forensic science, child protection. Classic examples include
judges giving wildly different punishments for identical crimes.
• Using the analogy of shots hitting a target, closely grouped shots could be spot on,
or consistently biased if off-centre, albeit still in a tight cluster. Widely spaced shots
are subject to noise.
• Respected professionals in many fields maintain an illusion of agreement when in
fact a noise audit can reveal a large variance in estimates (43% in insurance for
example). Meanwhile, the bosses believe that this is only likely to be about 10%.
• A singular decision is a recurrent decision that is made only once. Your mind is
essentially a measuring instrument.
• Level noise is variability in the average level of judgement.
• Pattern noise is variability in responses to particular cases. Part of this is occasion
noise (being influenced by the context).
• This can be offset by assuming that your first estimate is wrong and providing an
alternative estimate. Seeking an outside view from someone will also help. Both
approaches can increase decision hygiene.
• Rules simplify life and reduce noise. Meanwhile, standards allow people to adjust to
the particulars of a situation. Helpful questions include:
- Was an easier question substituted for the real one?
- Was any important factor or piece of evidence ignored?
- Was an outside view sought?
- Did dissenters express their views?
- Is bias at play?
- Does anyone stand to gain from this decision?
- Were alternatives fully considered? greatesthitsblog.com
Diverse thinking is far more
powerful than when everyone
agrees with each other.
greatesthitsblog.com
• Collective blindness occurs when everyone thinks the same - a phenomenon often
referred to as an echo chamber.
• Rebels think differently to clones, and constructive dissent leads to more intelligent
innovation. A series of intelligent people can become unintelligent if they all think alike.
• A team of intelligent rebels fair well so long as they overlap a little, discuss things
robustly, and pool perspectives that are germane and synergistic. They do not agree for
the sake of it or parrot each other’s views. They challenge, augment, diverge and cross-
pollinate. Diverse groups of problem solvers consistently outperform groups of the best
and the brightest.
• With perspective blindness, we are oblivious to our own blind spots. We perceive and
interpret the world through frames of reference, but we can’t see those frames.
• Homophily describes those who tend to associate and bond with others like themselves.
This leads to a form of perpetual sameness in thinking and action - a form of
homogeneity.
• In total, geniuses are less like to experience innovation than networkers, because they
don’t share ideas as much.
• When it comes to evolution, we tend to think that big brains lead to great ideas, but
really it is the other way round – clever innovation has made our brains bigger. Our
species is constructed on diversity – recombinations and discoveries that sweep
through our networks, building the collective brain.
• When it comes to work environments, the lean condition is minimalist, but it doesn’t lead
to good productivity. An enriched condition with plants and prints on the wall increases
performance by 15%. Even better, in the personalised condition whereby people can
design their own set up, they work 30% better than those in the lean condition.
• In the clone fallacy, we think in linear ways about complex, multi-dimensional
challenges, and it doesn’t work well.
greatesthitsblog.com
Being a good boss and
coping with people at work
is all about understanding
their psychological type.
greatesthitsblog.com
• This book is subtitled (surrounded by) lazy employees (or, how to deal with idiots at
work). Once again the author draws on the four-colour behavioural model made famous
in Surrounded By Idiots and Surrounded By Psychopaths. The differences between
types can be summarized by an anecdote when each type walks into an elevator:
• Blue person: calculates the weight of everyone in the lift in relation to the maximum
permitted load
• Red person: goes straight in and presses the button repeatedly
• Green person: Uses the ‘open the door’ button so everyone can get in
• Yellow person: sees the journey as a great opportunity to chat
• The book includes a range of tactics to understand and outsmart vexatious bosses and
flaky employees such as a controlling micro-manager or a ‘nice’ boss that is actually a
professional backstabber.
• Good bosses need to distinguish clearly between two roles:
1. Leader: achieves results through others
2. Specialist: achieves results themselves
• You can immediately see that any boss who does it all themselves will be ineffective.
Boss is what you are. Leader is what you do. The boss is the person you must follow –
the leader is the person you want to follow.
• Task-oriented people are more interested in concrete tasks than in relationships, and
vice versa. Effective leadership is partly task-oriented and partly commitment-oriented.
You need people with high will and high skill (competence and commitment).
• Behaviours are one thing - personality is something else.
• A good boss says: “I need your help.”
• A powerful question to staff who are always asking for permission is: “If you hadn’t been
able to ask me, what would you have done?”
• A good boss finds the right balance between instruction and support, including
education, challenging, delegating, and being present.
greatesthitsblog.com
Life will always throw you
curveballs but it’s how you
respond that counts.
greatesthitsblog.com
• At some point we all face the unexpected, but if you understand your own
psychology and deploy the right strategy, you can turn any setback into
something better.
• Most difficulties are less to do with other people and more to do with the way you
react. This is linked to your colour type based on the DISC model: Dominance =
red, Inspiration = yellow, Stability = green, Compliance = blue (see summaries of
his other books). You need to see the warning signs and stop making excuses.
• We all have a tendency to focus on the negative because of our innate survival
instinct, and we can escalate a minor problem into a serious crisis in just a few
minutes.
• Self-awareness will lead you down the right path. You need to dare to notice what
doesn’t work, make changes, and adapt with a new attitude.
• Knowledge is not power – it is potential power. What you are capable of is
irrelevant, and so is what you know. The only thing that matters is what you
actually do. You have three basic responsibilities:
1. Everything you do: your decisions, your actions and how you do them
2. Everything you don’t do: what you refrain from, willpower and resisting
temptation
3. Your reaction to everything that happens: your attitude to events that you
can’t influence, and using restraint when you would rather react (possibly
inappropriately)
• Being grumpy and constantly complaining is referred to by lecturer Jorgen Oom
as sawing sawdust – there’s nothing left to saw. Ironically, what we complain
about is usually something that we have the power to change, and yet we don’t
do anything. greatesthitsblog.com
The most intelligent
people can still be
remarkably stupid when
they fall into the
intelligence trap.
greatesthitsblog.com
• We assume that smarter people are less prone to error, but greater education and
expertise can often amplify our mistakes while rendering us blind to our biases. This is
the intelligence trap.
• Intelligent and educated people are less likely to learn from their mistakes or take advice
from others. When they do err, they build elaborate arguments to justify their reasoning,
becoming more and more dogmatic in their views. They also have a bigger bias blind
spot, so they are less able to recognise holes in their logic. There are three broad
reasons:
1. Lack of creative or practical intelligence for dealing with life in general.
2. Using biased intuitive judgments to make decisions.
3. Using their intelligence to dismiss any contradictory evidence (‘earned dogmatism’).
• Dysrationalia is the inability to think and behave rationally despite having adequate
intelligence. Arthur Conan Doyle developed the Sherlock Holmes character whilst
genuinely believing in fairies.
• Confirmation bias, or myside bias, refers to the many kinds of tactics we use to support
our viewpoint and diminish alternatives.
• In linear sequential unmasking, forensic analysts make their judgements ‘blind’, without
any knowledge of previous diagnoses, thus avoiding bias.
• The intelligence trap has 4 potential forms:
1. We may lack the necessary tacit knowledge and counter-factual thinking that are essential
for executing a plan and pre-empting consequences.
2. We may suffer from dysrationalia, motivated reasoning and the bias blind spot – building
‘logic tight compartments’ around our beliefs.
3. We may place too much confidence in our judgement due to earned dogmatism, fail to
note our limitations and over-reach our abilities.
4. We use our expertise to employ entrenched automatic behaviours that render us oblivious
to obvious warning signs that disaster is looming. greatesthitsblog.com
You can develop critical
thinking habits to
recognise and combat the
pervasive false
information that deceives
individuals and harms
society.
greatesthitsblog.com
• Bullshit is the foundation of contaminated thinking and bad decisions that leads to
health consequences, financial losses, legal consequences, broken relationships,
and wasted time and resources.
• No matter how smart we believe ourselves to be, we’re all susceptible to bullshit, and
we all engage in it. While we may brush it off as harmless marketing and sales speak
or as humorous, embellished claims, it’s actually very dangerous and insidious.
• The author offers a Bullshit Flies Index to classify 3 different types:
1 fly: Harmless. Innocuous, mildly offensive, unlikely to cause harm. eg. Making
up the weather
2 flies: Bad. Harmful potential by failing to conform to standards of moral conduct,
unpleasant, unwelcome. eg. Making up numbers
3 flies: Dangerous. Able and likely to cause harm, injury, or problems with adverse
consequences. eg. Lethal advice
• Bullibility is a combination of bull and gullible. This is the degree to which an
individual is blind to bullshit – accepting it as fact and failing to infer that the
bullshitter has no regard for the truth. Versions of this include personal (who we are),
contextual (the situations we face), cognitive (how we think), emotional (how we
feel), and motivational (preference for bullshit over truth and facts).
• Reasons for the prevalence of bullshit include an obligation to provide an opinion,
social expectations to know everything, the desire for attention, fame or wealth, the
need to belong, and the ease of passing it on.
• Tactics of the bullshit artist include completely disregarding all evidence that
disproves the claim, focusing attention on unreliable anecdotal evidence that
supports the claim, pseudo-profundity, exaggerating levels of credibility,
unsubstantiated character building and assassination, and appeal to interpersonal
relationships. greatesthitsblog.com
70% of global emissions come
from the same hundred
companies, but they have
taken no responsibility
themselves - instead, they
have waged a 39-year
campaign to blame individuals
for climate change. The result
has been disastrous for the
planet, and it’s time to fight
back.
greatesthitsblog.com
• The overwhelmingly largest carbon footprint is the fossil fuel industry.
• The author draws the battle lines between the people and the polluters – these fossil
fuel companies, right-wing plutocrats, and petro-states – and outlines a plan for forcing
governments and corporations to wake up and make real change.
• There are immensely powerful vested interests aligned in defence of the fossil fuel
status quo.
• Fossil fuel interests and those doing their bidding have a single goal – ‘inaction’
(thereby thwarting the systemic action that could eat into their profits).
• In the set-up, Mann highlights a recently unearthed internal document from an Exxon
Mobil senior scientist that warned of climate change issues caused by their activities as
early as the 1970s.
• Ignoring these responsibilities and instead emphasising individual responsibility over
collective action or government regulation continues a pattern set by many other guilty
industries. The tobacco industry had their own research showing a direct link between
cigarettes and lung cancer as early as the 1950s, and the gun lobby invented the
slogan “Guns don’t kill people. People kill people.” as early as the 1920s.
• In 2009, following the unprecedented disaster of Hurricane Katrina and Al Gore’s wildly
successful documentary An Inconvenient Truth, it seemed the world was waking up and
ready to act on climate. The forces of denial, however, would intercede and
manufacture a fake ‘scandal’ in the weeks leading up to the United Nations Climate
Change Conference in Copenhagen – subsequently known as ‘Climategate’.
Thousands of emails between climate scientists were stolen from a university computer
server in the UK. Bits and pieces of emails were disingenuously rearranged and taken
out of context – leading to claims of proof that climate change was an elaborate hoax.
• These inactivists have since been forced into retreat from ‘hard’ climate denial and
moved to ‘softer’ denial: downplaying, deflecting, dividing, delaying, and despair-
mongering.
greatesthitsblog.com
If you don’t admit you don’t
know what’s happening, you
can never find out, and if you
don’t find out, you can never
change it.
greatesthitsblog.com
Feeling (feel good)
Fluency (be recognisable)
• The most important step in changing anything is admitting that you don’t know. That’s
the power of ignorance. Great problems solvers are not afraid to say: “I don’t know.”
From that start point, they can investigate with an open mind, and often come up with
some ingenious approaches. The author looks at 8 areas:
1. What you don’t know you don’t know.
2. We can’t know what hasn’t happened.
3. Ignorance is a secret weapon.
4. Simple is smart. Complicated is stupid.
5. The power of an open mind.
6. Ignorance we can fix. Stupid we can’t.
7. Real ignorance beats fast knowledge.
8. Thinking we know is a trap.
• People who feel secure have no need to take chances, but people who feel insecure
have to take chances.
• People will judge what they need based on what their competition has.
• Semiotics is language without words. In the 1960s, Margaret Calvert designed the UK’s
road signage system. She tested them by driving them at some airmen at 100mph – the
context in which they would be seen. She made the complicated simple: motorways
would be white on blue, A roads, white on green (with yellow numbers), and B roads
black on white. Triangles for warnings; circles for commands; squares for information.
• In publishing, there is something called publication bias or the Woozle Effect (named
after the Winnie-the-Pooh story in which they believe they are following a Woozle, when
they are following their own footsteps). Once a journalist cites something, another takes
it as fact, and it snowballs from there, but it might not be true.
greatesthitsblog.com
Success is not achieved
by the genius of any one
leader, but through
commitment to a set of
well-defined and
rigorously executed
principles and practices.
greatesthitsblog.com
Feeling (feel good)
Fluency (be recognisable)
• This book contains insights, stories and secrets from inside Amazon.
• Since the early days, the company has stood by 4 core principles: obsess over
customers, it’s all about the long term, we will continue to learn from both our
successes and failures, and operational excellence. These led to a series of 14
leadership principles.
1. Customer obsession: start with the customer and work backwards.
2. Ownership: leaders act on behalf of the whole company.
3. Invent and simplify: look for new ideas from everywhere.
4. Are right, a lot: leaders have strong judgment and good instincts.
5. Learn and be curious: you never stop learning.
6. Hire and develop the best: raise the performance bar with every hire.
7. Insist on the highest standards: relentlessly.
8. Think big: thinking small is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
9. Bias for action: speed matters in business.
10. Frugality: accomplish more with less.
11. Earn trust: listen attentively and speak candidly.
12. Dive deep: operate at all levels and stay connected.
13. Have backbone; disagree and commit - discuss, then commit wholly.
14. Deliver results: be accountable.
greatesthitsblog.com
You can fight the biases
that distort decision-
making by learning to
recognize them and
using a range of
techniques.
greatesthitsblog.com
Feeling (feel good)
Fluency (be recognisable)
• This book asks the reader: When was the last time you listened to someone, or
someone really listened to you? As a society we have forgotten how to listen.
• Modern life is noisy and frenetic, and technology provides constant distraction (some
people are now officially addicted to distraction.) So we tune things out or listen
selectively – even to those we love most. We have become scared of other people’s
points of view, and of silence. People are uncomfortable with gaps in conversation.
It’s called dead air.
• At work, we are taught to lead the conversation. On social media we shape our
personal narratives. At parties we talk over one another. So do politicians. No one is
listening.
• Listening is about curiosity and patience – asking the right questions in the right way.
It has the potential to transform our relationships, improve our self-knowledge, and
increase our creativity and happiness.
• We listen best when we are in sync with the other person.
• We use assumptions as earplugs, thinking that we know what the other person is
going to say. The closeness-communication bias means that we overestimate our
ability to know what those closest to us are trying to say.
• We think faster than we speak, so there is a speech-thought differential.
• None of us is ‘woke’ or fully awake to the realities of people who are unlike us. One
can only speak for one’s self.
• Listening to opposing views makes us more entrenched, not more open-minded.
Many people now show the traits of hyperpartisanship. Good listeners have negative
capability – the ability to handle uncertainty without becoming irritable. Look for
evidence that you might be wrong.
greatesthitsblog.com
• Be inquisitive
• Make the time
• Understand the lines of argument
• Have a point of view
• Inform your work
• Enjoy the debate
• Ask Kevin to speak or train
greatesthitsblog.com
greatesthitsblog.com
Ask Kevin to speak or train: 07979 808770
kevinduncanexpertadvice@gmail.com
expertadviceonline.com

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing Ideas
Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing IdeasIdeate! Create and Develop World-Changing Ideas
Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing IdeasChiara Ojeda
 
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330 UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330 Paul Den
 
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making How To Do 21st Century Decision Making
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making Next Jump
 
Strategy execution ebook why most ideas fail pdf
Strategy execution ebook  why most ideas fail pdfStrategy execution ebook  why most ideas fail pdf
Strategy execution ebook why most ideas fail pdfJeroen De Flander
 
Backlogs and behavioral design
Backlogs and behavioral designBacklogs and behavioral design
Backlogs and behavioral designAgileDenver
 
superhumans and innovation workshops
superhumans and innovation workshopssuperhumans and innovation workshops
superhumans and innovation workshopsAgileDenver
 
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable Company
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable CompanyCulture Code: Creating A Lovable Company
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable CompanyHubSpot
 
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017AgileDenver
 
Time for true radicals
Time for true radicalsTime for true radicals
Time for true radicalsGareth Kay
 
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight Definition
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight DefinitionWhat Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight Definition
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight DefinitionJonathan Dalton
 
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About It
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About ItCulture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About It
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About ItReuven Gorsht
 
110518leadershipheineken hwg
110518leadershipheineken hwg110518leadershipheineken hwg
110518leadershipheineken hwgGidi Heynens
 
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...BizLibrary
 
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...Flamingo
 
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"Bryan Cassady
 
How to develop Insights
How to develop InsightsHow to develop Insights
How to develop InsightsTC Miles
 
The Change Process
The Change ProcessThe Change Process
The Change ProcessLois Kelly
 
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Cathey
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen CatheySocial Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Cathey
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Catheynwrecruit
 
What have we learned about feedback?
What have we learned about feedback? What have we learned about feedback?
What have we learned about feedback? Next Jump
 

Tendances (20)

Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing Ideas
Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing IdeasIdeate! Create and Develop World-Changing Ideas
Ideate! Create and Develop World-Changing Ideas
 
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330 UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330
UTS - Insights Lecture - 59330
 
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making How To Do 21st Century Decision Making
How To Do 21st Century Decision Making
 
Strategy execution ebook why most ideas fail pdf
Strategy execution ebook  why most ideas fail pdfStrategy execution ebook  why most ideas fail pdf
Strategy execution ebook why most ideas fail pdf
 
Backlogs and behavioral design
Backlogs and behavioral designBacklogs and behavioral design
Backlogs and behavioral design
 
superhumans and innovation workshops
superhumans and innovation workshopssuperhumans and innovation workshops
superhumans and innovation workshops
 
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable Company
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable CompanyCulture Code: Creating A Lovable Company
Culture Code: Creating A Lovable Company
 
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017
Metrics 3.0 andy cleff mha 2017
 
Time for true radicals
Time for true radicalsTime for true radicals
Time for true radicals
 
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight Definition
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight DefinitionWhat Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight Definition
What Is Insight? The Five Principles of Effective Insight Definition
 
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About It
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About ItCulture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About It
Culture Feasts on Innovation: Here's What you Can Do About It
 
110518leadershipheineken hwg
110518leadershipheineken hwg110518leadershipheineken hwg
110518leadershipheineken hwg
 
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...
Top 5 Soft Skills: What Successful People Know that Every Employee Needs to K...
 
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...
What is an Insight? A disturbance in discourse...
 
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"
CYCLES course: Bonus lecture "Building Innovation Habits"
 
How to develop Insights
How to develop InsightsHow to develop Insights
How to develop Insights
 
The Change Process
The Change ProcessThe Change Process
The Change Process
 
How To Create An Insight
How To Create An InsightHow To Create An Insight
How To Create An Insight
 
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Cathey
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen CatheySocial Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Cathey
Social Engineering: The Human Element of Sourcing and Recruiting | Glen Cathey
 
What have we learned about feedback?
What have we learned about feedback? What have we learned about feedback?
What have we learned about feedback?
 

Similaire à 21 from 21

Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social Media
Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social MediaRingling College of Art & Design: Content and Social Media
Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social MediaAutumn Sullivan
 
Personal branding
Personal brandingPersonal branding
Personal brandingLIXIL
 
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsxcreative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsxAshenafiAberaWolde
 
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptxcreative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptxArindamMondal99
 
Brand innovation & Social media
Brand innovation & Social media Brand innovation & Social media
Brand innovation & Social media cherylannsmith
 
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...Royal LePage Wolstencroft
 
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.MoBerries GmbH
 
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...Ideas4all
 
Big Bang Challenge Competition
Big Bang Challenge CompetitionBig Bang Challenge Competition
Big Bang Challenge CompetitionRocio Bravo
 
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursThings I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursLaurent Haug
 
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursThings I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursBuyAndSellABusiness.com
 
The New Breed Culture Code
The New Breed Culture CodeThe New Breed Culture Code
The New Breed Culture CodeNew Breed
 
Successful Digital Content Strategy
Successful Digital Content StrategySuccessful Digital Content Strategy
Successful Digital Content StrategyNicole Hess
 
The copycompilation 2010
The copycompilation 2010The copycompilation 2010
The copycompilation 2010ideawriter
 

Similaire à 21 from 21 (20)

20 from 20
20 from 2020 from 20
20 from 20
 
20 from 20
20 from 2020 from 20
20 from 20
 
Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social Media
Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social MediaRingling College of Art & Design: Content and Social Media
Ringling College of Art & Design: Content and Social Media
 
Personal branding
Personal brandingPersonal branding
Personal branding
 
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsxcreative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.ppsx
 
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptxcreative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptx
creative-problem-solving-supplemental-self-study-presentation.pptx
 
Brand innovation & Social media
Brand innovation & Social media Brand innovation & Social media
Brand innovation & Social media
 
The elephant catchers
The elephant catchersThe elephant catchers
The elephant catchers
 
SMCFW - SXSW Downloaded
SMCFW - SXSW DownloadedSMCFW - SXSW Downloaded
SMCFW - SXSW Downloaded
 
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...
Agent Quest Best Possible Advice for Launching Your Real Estate Career from T...
 
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.
Blue Ocean Strategy: Branding & Sales.
 
Just be Human
Just be HumanJust be Human
Just be Human
 
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...
Innovation as management axis towards the top. Madrid. Fundacion Rafael del p...
 
Big Bang Challenge Competition
Big Bang Challenge CompetitionBig Bang Challenge Competition
Big Bang Challenge Competition
 
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursThings I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
 
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneursThings I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
Things I will tell my kids if they become entrepreneurs
 
The New Breed Culture Code
The New Breed Culture CodeThe New Breed Culture Code
The New Breed Culture Code
 
Wining
WiningWining
Wining
 
Successful Digital Content Strategy
Successful Digital Content StrategySuccessful Digital Content Strategy
Successful Digital Content Strategy
 
The copycompilation 2010
The copycompilation 2010The copycompilation 2010
The copycompilation 2010
 

Plus de Kevin Duncan

INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTS
INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTSINNOVATION FOR INTROVERTS
INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTSKevin Duncan
 
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKTHE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKKevin Duncan
 
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKTHE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKKevin Duncan
 
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your Best
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your BestThe Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your Best
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your BestKevin Duncan
 
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORK
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORKMAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORK
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORKKevin Duncan
 
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT ITWHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT ITKevin Duncan
 
THE SMART THINKING BOOK
THE SMART THINKING BOOKTHE SMART THINKING BOOK
THE SMART THINKING BOOKKevin Duncan
 
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICS
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICSTICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICS
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICSKevin Duncan
 
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of Argument
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of ArgumentHow To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of Argument
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of ArgumentKevin Duncan
 
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMP
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMPNEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMP
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMPKevin Duncan
 
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectively
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectivelyTick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectively
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectivelyKevin Duncan
 
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORM
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORMOH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORM
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORMKevin Duncan
 
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORK
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORKWHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORK
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORKKevin Duncan
 
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIME
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIMEUSING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIME
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIMEKevin Duncan
 
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMSHOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMSKevin Duncan
 
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013GREATEST HITS MAY 2013
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013Kevin Duncan
 
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMSHOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMSKevin Duncan
 

Plus de Kevin Duncan (20)

20 FROM 23.pptx
20 FROM 23.pptx20 FROM 23.pptx
20 FROM 23.pptx
 
22 FROM 22.pptx
22 FROM 22.pptx22 FROM 22.pptx
22 FROM 22.pptx
 
TICK ACHIEVE 2018
TICK ACHIEVE 2018TICK ACHIEVE 2018
TICK ACHIEVE 2018
 
INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTS
INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTSINNOVATION FOR INTROVERTS
INNOVATION FOR INTROVERTS
 
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKTHE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
 
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOKTHE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
THE SMART STRATEGY BOOK
 
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your Best
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your BestThe Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your Best
The Excellence Book: 50 Ways To Be Your Best
 
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORK
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORKMAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORK
MAKING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WORK
 
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT ITWHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT
WHY PEOPLE BULLSHIT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT
 
THE SMART THINKING BOOK
THE SMART THINKING BOOKTHE SMART THINKING BOOK
THE SMART THINKING BOOK
 
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICS
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICSTICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICS
TICK ACHIEVE 2015 WITH LATEST WORK STATISTICS
 
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of Argument
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of ArgumentHow To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of Argument
How To Have a Point Of View and Develop a Persuasive Line of Argument
 
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMP
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMPNEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMP
NEW BUSINESS SKILLS BOOTCAMP
 
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectively
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectivelyTick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectively
Tick Achieve 2014: What 5,000 people think about how to work effectively
 
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORM
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORMOH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORM
OH #@! I'VE GOT TO RUN A BRAINSTORM
 
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORK
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORKWHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORK
WHAT ANNOYS PEOPLE MOST AT WORK
 
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIME
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIMEUSING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIME
USING DIAGRAMS TO INSPIRE STAFF AND SHORTEN TRAINING TIME
 
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMSHOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO BE OPEN WITH DIAGRAMS
 
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013GREATEST HITS MAY 2013
GREATEST HITS MAY 2013
 
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMSHOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMS
HOW TO WIN A PITCH WITH DIAGRAMS
 

Dernier

Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Peter Ward
 
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy Verified Accounts
 
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdf
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdfDarshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdf
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdfShashank Mehta
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607dollysharma2066
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyotictsugar
 
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal audit
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal auditChapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal audit
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal auditNhtLNguyn9
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckHajeJanKamps
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptx
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptxAppkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptx
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptxappkodes
 
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Americas Got Grants
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationAnamaria Contreras
 
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?Olivia Kresic
 
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Anamaria Contreras
 
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524najka9823
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfRbc Rbcua
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfKhaled Al Awadi
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607dollysharma2066
 
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024Kirill Klimov
 

Dernier (20)

Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
 
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
 
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdf
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdfDarshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdf
Darshan Hiranandani [News About Next CEO].pdf
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Saket Delhi NCR
 
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607
(Best) ENJOY Call Girls in Faridabad Ex | 8377087607
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
 
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal audit
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal auditChapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal audit
Chapter 9 PPT 4th edition.pdf internal audit
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in New Ashok Nagar Delhi NCR
 
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptx
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptxAppkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptx
Appkodes Tinder Clone Script with Customisable Solutions.pptx
 
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
 
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?
MAHA Global and IPR: Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words?
 
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
Traction part 2 - EOS Model JAX Bridges.
 
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information TechnologyCorporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
 
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524
Call Girls Contact Number Andheri 9920874524
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
 
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024
Flow Your Strategy at Flight Levels Day 2024
 

21 from 21

  • 1. 21 FROM 21 THE BEST BUSINESS BOOKS OF 2021 greatesthitsblog.com
  • 2.  A library of over 450 books  A blog  A series of printed books  One-page summaries  One-sentence summaries  Training programmes  Motivational speeches  A fertile source of new ideas greatesthitsblog.com
  • 3. You can make sense of a complex world by carrying out quick plausibility tests, understanding how numbers are reported and separating experts from pseudo-experts. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 4. • We live in a world of information overload. Facts and figures on absolutely everything are at our fingertips, but are too often biased, distorted or outright lies. In a world where anyone can become an expert at the click of a button, being able to see through the tricks played with statistics is more necessary than ever before. • We need to ask ourselves: (a) Can we really know that? and (b) How do they know that? Doing this effectively allows us to evaluate numbers, words, and the world generally. • Statistics are not facts. They are interpretations, because people gather statistics. Sometimes the numbers are simply wrong Always ask yourself whether a claim is broadly plausible. Look at how the numbers were collected, interpreted and presented graphically. • There are three ways of calculating an average, and they often yield different numbers. People with statistical acumen usually avoid the word average in favour of the more precise: 1. Mean: add up all the observations or reports and divide by the number of observations or reports. 2. Median: the middle number in a set of numbers (half of the observations are above it, and half below) 3. Mode: the value that occurs most often. • Many graphs mislead and distort with a variety of tricks, including not labelling the axes, truncating the vertical axis, and messing around with scale. They can be made to tell almost any story. • How numbers are collected is essential to whether they tell an accurate story. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 5. Find focus, transform productivity and improve communication by reimagining work in the age of overload. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 6. • Email reduces productivity, makes us miserable and has a mind of its own, so let’s get rid of it. • In 2019 the average worker was sending and receiving 126 business emails a day – about one every four minutes. • The Hyperactive Hive Mind is a workflow centred around ongoing conversation fuelled by unstructured messages delivered through digital communication tools like email and instant messenger services. • Constant interruptions have a switching cost and leave attention residue, making it harder to concentrate on the next thing. The best workflows minimize mid-task context switches and minimize the sense of communication overload. • The Attention Capital Principle states that the productivity of the knowledge sector can be significantly increased if we identify workflows that better optimize the human brain’s ability to sustainably add value to information. • The Process Principle states that introducing smart production processes to knowledge work can dramatically increase performance and make the work less draining. • The Protocol Principle states that designing rules that optimize when and how coordination occurs in the workplace is a pain in the short term but can result in significantly more productive operation in the long term. • The Specialization Principle states that in the knowledge sector, working on fewer things, but doing each thing with more quality and accountability, can be the foundation for significantly more productivity. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 7. CATALYST Using personal chemistry to convert contacts into contracts works better than spreadsheets and pestering. ems. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 8. CATALYST • This book is all about prospecting for and winning new business. Good business developers know how to create chemistry with the people they meet. They catalyse a positive reaction from strangers when they connect. • Diligent farmers are the best model for business developers to adopt. They nurture other peoples’ interests and then reap the benefit when the appropriate time comes. • By contrast, sales dogs and spreadsheet bureaucrats generate a lot of online and meeting activity but don’t do as well. Interestingly, 80% of sales require five follow-up calls after the meeting but 44% of sales representatives give up after one follow-up. • Stop trying to control your networking universe. It works best when you let it be its natural state: random. Show up and keep showing up because you never know who you will meet and what might happen. • It’s all about developing chemistry – how you make them feel. • Beware of charmers at networking events who want a contact or a sale but are only interested in themselves. They are called ANTHONYs: All about me Not interested in you That reminds me of something I did that is a lot more interesting than what you did Happy to talk over you Over your shoulder is someone far more useful to me (scanning the room) Never follow up or say thank you if you help them You are now, apparently, one of 500 of their closest friends • Being helpful is the aim. Help the prospect identify their real needs, expand them, and create new ones. Approaches to a prospect should be completely customised every time – do not cut and paste from previous efforts. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 9. It is Although arguments appear to be tearing us apart, conflict can bring us together if approached in the right way. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 10. The author’s rules for productive argument are: 1. First, connect: Before getting to the content of the disagreement, establish a relationship of trust. 2. Let go of the rope: To disagree well, you have to give up on trying to control what the other person thinks or feels. 3. Give face: Disagreements become toxic when they become status battles. The skilful disagreer makes every effort to make their adversary feel good about themselves. 4. Check your weirdness: Behind many disagreements is a clash of cultures that seems strange to each other. Don’t assume that you are the normal one. 5. Get curious: The rush to judgement stops us listening and learning. Instead of trying to win the argument, try and be interested – and interesting. 6. Make wrong strong: Mistakes can be positive if you apologize rapidly and authentically. They enable you to show humility, which can strengthen the relationship and ease the conversation. 7. Disrupt the script: Hostile arguments get locked into simple and predictable patterns. To make the disagreement more productive, introduce novelty and variation. Be surprising. 8. Share constraints: Disagreement benefits from a set of agreed norms and boundaries that support self-expression. Rules create freedom. 9. Only get mad on purpose: No amount of theorising can fully prepare for the emotional experience of a disagreement. Sometimes your worst adversary is yourself. 10. Golden rule: Be real: All rules are subordinate to the golden rule: make an honest human connection. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 11. Conscious leaders can operate in a way that is beneficial to purpose, pragmatism and profit. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 12. • This is all about elevating humanity through business. The author is the CEO of Whole Foods Market, and here he proposes a road map for values-based leadership: Vision & Virtue Conscious leaders: 1. Put purpose first – not just profit, but the value that can be contributed to the world. 2. Lead with love – an opportunity to serve and uplift people and communities. This is servant leadership. Types of love can include generosity gratitude, appreciation, care, competition and forgiveness. 3. Always act with integrity – holding themselves to the highest standards. Types of integrity include telling the truth, acting with honour and integrity, being authentic, having the courage to do the right thing, and being trustworthy. Mindset & Strategy 1. Find win-win-win solutions – both parties win, and the community. This could be in many contexts, including family, city, state, nation, humans and animals generally, or the state of the biosphere. 2. Innovate and create value – build cultures that nurture and liberate the creative spirit. Create the right incentives, encourage healthy competition, start a conspiracy (make innovators think they are in on a secret), embrace the edges, and celebrate innovation as it happens. 3. Think long term – about the impact of their actions and choices. Pre-mortems guess what will go wrong before it does. Ask: what really matters? What risks are worth taking? People & Culture 1. Constantly evolve the team – are sensitive to the culture around them. 2. Regularly revitalise – renewing their own physical, mental, emotional and spiritual energy. 3. Continually learn and grow – personally and professionally. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 13. There’s a myth that creativity is something that you have to be born with but this isn’t the case – anyone can be creative. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 14. • You might think that creativity is some mysterious, rare gift – one that only a few possess. That’s not true. It’s a skill that anyone can acquire. • Creativity is simply new ways of thinking about things. It is not the sole preserve of the arts. It can be seen in every area of life. • Your unconscious works on stuff all the time, without you being conscious of it, and even when you think it isn’t. If you put the work in on a problem before going to bed, an idea will usually present itself the following morning. • Our intelligent unconscious is astoundingly powerful. It allows us to perform most of our tasks in life without requiring us to concentrate on them. Put simply, you can’t ask your unconscious a question and expect a direct answer – a neat, tidy little verbal message - because the language of the unconscious is not verbal. • In Hare Brain, Tortoise Mind, author Guy Claxton talks about two different ways of thinking: 1. Hare Brain: figuring matters out, weighing up the pros and cons, constructing arguments and solving problems. Quick and purposeful. 2. Tortoise Mind: proceeds more slowly, less purposeful and clear-cut, more playful, leisurely or dreamy. Meditative and pondering. • Crucially the Tortoise Mind, for all its apparent aimlessness, is just as ‘intelligent’ as the much faster Hare Brain. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 15. Not everything has to be so hard – you can make it easier to do what matters most. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 16. • You can make it easier to focus by creating an effortless state, concentrating on effortless action and getting the highest return on the least effort. • In an exhausting approach, you think that anything worth doing takes tremendous effort, you try too hard, overcomplicate, overengineer, overthink and overdo, and so what you get is burnout and none of the results you want. • In an effortless approach, you realise that the most essential things can be the easiest ones, you find the easier path, and get the right results without burning out. • To achieve this, start with: – Invert: what if this could be easy? – Enjoy: what if this could be fun? – Release: let go and enjoy the relief – Rest: consider the art of doing nothing – Notice: see things clearly for what they are • Effortless action involves: – Define: what ‘done’ looks like – Start: work out the first obvious action – Simplify: start with zero and take it from there – Progress: have the courage to be rubbish – Pace: slow is smooth, smooth is fast • For effortless results: – Learn: leverage the best of what others know – Lift: harness the strength of other people’s views and efforts – Automate: do it once and never again – Trust: the engine of high-leverage teams – Prevent: solve the problem before it happens – Now: what happens next matters most greatesthitsblog.com
  • 17. Figuring out how to get all the benefits of cheap, reliable power without greenhouse gas emissions (through investment and innovation) is the single most important thing we must do to avoid a climate disaster. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 18. • There are two numbers you need to know about climate change. The first is 51 billion. The other is zero. 51 billion is how many tons of greenhouse gases the world typically adds to the atmosphere every year. Zero is what we need to aim for (to stop the warming and avoid the worst effects of climate change). • There is no scenario in which we keep adding carbon to the atmosphere and the world stops getting hotter. And the hotter it gets, the harder it will be for humans to survive, much less thrive. 1/5 of carbon dioxide emitted today will still be there in 10,000 years. • It is estimated that Covid reduced emissions to 48 or 49 billion tons of carbon – a reduction of around 5%. But consider what it took to achieve this 5%. A million people have died, and tens of millions have been put out of work. Not a situation that people would want to continue or repeat. • The author acknowledges he is an ‘imperfect messenger’ and that he can easily be seen as just ‘another rich guy with an opinion’. He came to focus on climate change in an indirect way – through the problem of energy poverty, which was highlighted work at the Gates Foundation. Their motto is ‘Everyone deserves the chance to live a healthy and productive life’. • Here lies a major tension. Is it fair to tell someone from a poor area of India that their children can’t have lights to study by (because they can’t afford green energy), or that thousands could die in heat waves because installing air conditioners is bad for the environment? • Gates asserts: it would be immoral and impractical to try to stop people who are lower down on the economic ladder from climbing up. • We need to accomplish something gigantic we have never done before, much faster than we have ever done anything similar. Figuring out how to get all the benefits of cheap, reliable electricity without greenhouse gas emissions is the single most important thing we must do to avoid a climate disaster. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 19. With the right approach it is possible to evaluate confidently the claims that surround us. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 20. • The book contains ten rules for thinking differently about numbers, plus one golden rule. They are: • Search your feelings: how does this make me feel, and why? Check your emotional reaction. • Ponder your personal experience: take the worm’s eye view (personal) as well as the bird’s eye view (statistical). • Avoid premature enumeration: don’t take numbers at face value – establish what is really being counted. • Step back and enjoy the view: ask yourself: is that a big number? Put the claim into context and look for comparisons. • Get the back story: look behind the statistics to find out where they came from. • Ask who is missing: not all data is comprehensive. Would our view be different if we knew more? • Demand transparency when the computer says no: what algorithm was used and how accurate and helpful is it? Without intelligent openness big datasets cannot be trusted. • Don’t take statistical bedrock for granted: most official statistics can be trusted, but many others can’t. • Remember that misinformation can be beautiful too: beware misleading graphs and charts – they can be designed to prove pretty much anything, so check that you understand what the axes actually mean. The smarter they are, the more suspicious you should be. • Keep an open mind: how might I be mistaken, and have the facts changes since? • +. The golden rule. Be curious: look deeper and ask questions. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 21. Long hours, excessive workloads and functioning with a lack of sleep should be marks of stupidity, not badges of honour. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 22. • This book is a direct attack on the chaos, anxiety and stress that hamper billions of workers every day. The answer to better productivity isn’t more hours – it’s less waste and fewer things that induce distraction and persistent stress. It’s time to stop celebrating ‘crazy’ and start celebrating ‘calm’. • Things that don’t work include 80-hour weeks, packed schedules, endless meetings, an overflowing inbox, unrealistic deadlines, Sunday afternoon emails, being stuck at the office, having no time to think, and throwing all-nighters. • You can still operate a perfectly successful business in 8-hour days, 40-hour weeks, with plenty of time to yourself, comfortably paced days, no weekend work, no rushing, realistic deadlines, no knee-jerk reactions, a great night’s sleep, ample autonomy, and the ability to work from anywhere. • There are two primary reasons why ‘crazy’ has become ‘the new normal’: • 1. The workday is being sliced into tiny, fleeting work moments by an onslaught of physical and visual distractions. • 2. An unhealthy obsession with growth at any cost sets towering, unrealistic expectations that stress people out. • The authors are advocates of calm, which means protecting people’s time and attention, working 40 hours a week, reasonable expectations, ample time off, and meetings as a last resort. • The business world is obsessed with fighting and winning. It’s a zero-sum world in which they conquer market share rather than earn it, capture customers rather than serve them. They target customers, pick their battles and make a killing. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 23. Courageous companies thrive by giving more than they take. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 24. • A net positive company improves the lives of everyone it touches, takes ownership of all the social and environmental impacts its business model creates, and partners with competitors, civil society and governments to drive transformative change that no single group or enterprise could deliver alone. • Our current economic system has two fundamental weaknesses: it’s based on unlimited growth on a finite planet, and it benefits a small number of people, not everyone. The ultimate question is: Is the world better off because your business is in it? Fundamental principles include: • You break the world, you own it (just like an item in a shop) • You need to care, and be courageous • Unlock the company’s soul (discover organizational and employee purpose and passion – go back to their roots to understand original purpose) • Blow up boundaries (by thinking big and setting aggressive net positive goals – if a goal is not making you uncomfortable, it’s not aggressive enough. Achievable and Realistic elements of SMART objectives are therefore not good enough because they lack ambition.) • Be an open book (by building trust and transparency) • Create partnerships with synergies and multiplier effects: 1+1=11 (Companies should not be one-upping their competitors on shared challenges – they should be precompetitive so that the whole category wins) • Embrace the elephants (manage issues that no one wants to talk about, such as paying taxes, corruption, overpaying executives, human rights, lobbying etc.) • Put the values into action – deep in the organization and brands • Be even more responsible for broader impacts (do more good), challenge consumption and growth, rethink measures of success such as GDP, improve social contracts, defend the pillars of society and pursue a higher moral ground) greatesthitsblog.com
  • 25. Noise causes flaws in human judgement and if ignored it can come at a great cost to individuals and organizations. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 26. • Noise produces errors in many fields including medicine, law, public health, economic forecasting, forensic science, child protection. Classic examples include judges giving wildly different punishments for identical crimes. • Using the analogy of shots hitting a target, closely grouped shots could be spot on, or consistently biased if off-centre, albeit still in a tight cluster. Widely spaced shots are subject to noise. • Respected professionals in many fields maintain an illusion of agreement when in fact a noise audit can reveal a large variance in estimates (43% in insurance for example). Meanwhile, the bosses believe that this is only likely to be about 10%. • A singular decision is a recurrent decision that is made only once. Your mind is essentially a measuring instrument. • Level noise is variability in the average level of judgement. • Pattern noise is variability in responses to particular cases. Part of this is occasion noise (being influenced by the context). • This can be offset by assuming that your first estimate is wrong and providing an alternative estimate. Seeking an outside view from someone will also help. Both approaches can increase decision hygiene. • Rules simplify life and reduce noise. Meanwhile, standards allow people to adjust to the particulars of a situation. Helpful questions include: - Was an easier question substituted for the real one? - Was any important factor or piece of evidence ignored? - Was an outside view sought? - Did dissenters express their views? - Is bias at play? - Does anyone stand to gain from this decision? - Were alternatives fully considered? greatesthitsblog.com
  • 27. Diverse thinking is far more powerful than when everyone agrees with each other. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 28. • Collective blindness occurs when everyone thinks the same - a phenomenon often referred to as an echo chamber. • Rebels think differently to clones, and constructive dissent leads to more intelligent innovation. A series of intelligent people can become unintelligent if they all think alike. • A team of intelligent rebels fair well so long as they overlap a little, discuss things robustly, and pool perspectives that are germane and synergistic. They do not agree for the sake of it or parrot each other’s views. They challenge, augment, diverge and cross- pollinate. Diverse groups of problem solvers consistently outperform groups of the best and the brightest. • With perspective blindness, we are oblivious to our own blind spots. We perceive and interpret the world through frames of reference, but we can’t see those frames. • Homophily describes those who tend to associate and bond with others like themselves. This leads to a form of perpetual sameness in thinking and action - a form of homogeneity. • In total, geniuses are less like to experience innovation than networkers, because they don’t share ideas as much. • When it comes to evolution, we tend to think that big brains lead to great ideas, but really it is the other way round – clever innovation has made our brains bigger. Our species is constructed on diversity – recombinations and discoveries that sweep through our networks, building the collective brain. • When it comes to work environments, the lean condition is minimalist, but it doesn’t lead to good productivity. An enriched condition with plants and prints on the wall increases performance by 15%. Even better, in the personalised condition whereby people can design their own set up, they work 30% better than those in the lean condition. • In the clone fallacy, we think in linear ways about complex, multi-dimensional challenges, and it doesn’t work well. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 29. Being a good boss and coping with people at work is all about understanding their psychological type. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 30. • This book is subtitled (surrounded by) lazy employees (or, how to deal with idiots at work). Once again the author draws on the four-colour behavioural model made famous in Surrounded By Idiots and Surrounded By Psychopaths. The differences between types can be summarized by an anecdote when each type walks into an elevator: • Blue person: calculates the weight of everyone in the lift in relation to the maximum permitted load • Red person: goes straight in and presses the button repeatedly • Green person: Uses the ‘open the door’ button so everyone can get in • Yellow person: sees the journey as a great opportunity to chat • The book includes a range of tactics to understand and outsmart vexatious bosses and flaky employees such as a controlling micro-manager or a ‘nice’ boss that is actually a professional backstabber. • Good bosses need to distinguish clearly between two roles: 1. Leader: achieves results through others 2. Specialist: achieves results themselves • You can immediately see that any boss who does it all themselves will be ineffective. Boss is what you are. Leader is what you do. The boss is the person you must follow – the leader is the person you want to follow. • Task-oriented people are more interested in concrete tasks than in relationships, and vice versa. Effective leadership is partly task-oriented and partly commitment-oriented. You need people with high will and high skill (competence and commitment). • Behaviours are one thing - personality is something else. • A good boss says: “I need your help.” • A powerful question to staff who are always asking for permission is: “If you hadn’t been able to ask me, what would you have done?” • A good boss finds the right balance between instruction and support, including education, challenging, delegating, and being present. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 31. Life will always throw you curveballs but it’s how you respond that counts. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 32. • At some point we all face the unexpected, but if you understand your own psychology and deploy the right strategy, you can turn any setback into something better. • Most difficulties are less to do with other people and more to do with the way you react. This is linked to your colour type based on the DISC model: Dominance = red, Inspiration = yellow, Stability = green, Compliance = blue (see summaries of his other books). You need to see the warning signs and stop making excuses. • We all have a tendency to focus on the negative because of our innate survival instinct, and we can escalate a minor problem into a serious crisis in just a few minutes. • Self-awareness will lead you down the right path. You need to dare to notice what doesn’t work, make changes, and adapt with a new attitude. • Knowledge is not power – it is potential power. What you are capable of is irrelevant, and so is what you know. The only thing that matters is what you actually do. You have three basic responsibilities: 1. Everything you do: your decisions, your actions and how you do them 2. Everything you don’t do: what you refrain from, willpower and resisting temptation 3. Your reaction to everything that happens: your attitude to events that you can’t influence, and using restraint when you would rather react (possibly inappropriately) • Being grumpy and constantly complaining is referred to by lecturer Jorgen Oom as sawing sawdust – there’s nothing left to saw. Ironically, what we complain about is usually something that we have the power to change, and yet we don’t do anything. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 33. The most intelligent people can still be remarkably stupid when they fall into the intelligence trap. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 34. • We assume that smarter people are less prone to error, but greater education and expertise can often amplify our mistakes while rendering us blind to our biases. This is the intelligence trap. • Intelligent and educated people are less likely to learn from their mistakes or take advice from others. When they do err, they build elaborate arguments to justify their reasoning, becoming more and more dogmatic in their views. They also have a bigger bias blind spot, so they are less able to recognise holes in their logic. There are three broad reasons: 1. Lack of creative or practical intelligence for dealing with life in general. 2. Using biased intuitive judgments to make decisions. 3. Using their intelligence to dismiss any contradictory evidence (‘earned dogmatism’). • Dysrationalia is the inability to think and behave rationally despite having adequate intelligence. Arthur Conan Doyle developed the Sherlock Holmes character whilst genuinely believing in fairies. • Confirmation bias, or myside bias, refers to the many kinds of tactics we use to support our viewpoint and diminish alternatives. • In linear sequential unmasking, forensic analysts make their judgements ‘blind’, without any knowledge of previous diagnoses, thus avoiding bias. • The intelligence trap has 4 potential forms: 1. We may lack the necessary tacit knowledge and counter-factual thinking that are essential for executing a plan and pre-empting consequences. 2. We may suffer from dysrationalia, motivated reasoning and the bias blind spot – building ‘logic tight compartments’ around our beliefs. 3. We may place too much confidence in our judgement due to earned dogmatism, fail to note our limitations and over-reach our abilities. 4. We use our expertise to employ entrenched automatic behaviours that render us oblivious to obvious warning signs that disaster is looming. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 35. You can develop critical thinking habits to recognise and combat the pervasive false information that deceives individuals and harms society. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 36. • Bullshit is the foundation of contaminated thinking and bad decisions that leads to health consequences, financial losses, legal consequences, broken relationships, and wasted time and resources. • No matter how smart we believe ourselves to be, we’re all susceptible to bullshit, and we all engage in it. While we may brush it off as harmless marketing and sales speak or as humorous, embellished claims, it’s actually very dangerous and insidious. • The author offers a Bullshit Flies Index to classify 3 different types: 1 fly: Harmless. Innocuous, mildly offensive, unlikely to cause harm. eg. Making up the weather 2 flies: Bad. Harmful potential by failing to conform to standards of moral conduct, unpleasant, unwelcome. eg. Making up numbers 3 flies: Dangerous. Able and likely to cause harm, injury, or problems with adverse consequences. eg. Lethal advice • Bullibility is a combination of bull and gullible. This is the degree to which an individual is blind to bullshit – accepting it as fact and failing to infer that the bullshitter has no regard for the truth. Versions of this include personal (who we are), contextual (the situations we face), cognitive (how we think), emotional (how we feel), and motivational (preference for bullshit over truth and facts). • Reasons for the prevalence of bullshit include an obligation to provide an opinion, social expectations to know everything, the desire for attention, fame or wealth, the need to belong, and the ease of passing it on. • Tactics of the bullshit artist include completely disregarding all evidence that disproves the claim, focusing attention on unreliable anecdotal evidence that supports the claim, pseudo-profundity, exaggerating levels of credibility, unsubstantiated character building and assassination, and appeal to interpersonal relationships. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 37. 70% of global emissions come from the same hundred companies, but they have taken no responsibility themselves - instead, they have waged a 39-year campaign to blame individuals for climate change. The result has been disastrous for the planet, and it’s time to fight back. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 38. • The overwhelmingly largest carbon footprint is the fossil fuel industry. • The author draws the battle lines between the people and the polluters – these fossil fuel companies, right-wing plutocrats, and petro-states – and outlines a plan for forcing governments and corporations to wake up and make real change. • There are immensely powerful vested interests aligned in defence of the fossil fuel status quo. • Fossil fuel interests and those doing their bidding have a single goal – ‘inaction’ (thereby thwarting the systemic action that could eat into their profits). • In the set-up, Mann highlights a recently unearthed internal document from an Exxon Mobil senior scientist that warned of climate change issues caused by their activities as early as the 1970s. • Ignoring these responsibilities and instead emphasising individual responsibility over collective action or government regulation continues a pattern set by many other guilty industries. The tobacco industry had their own research showing a direct link between cigarettes and lung cancer as early as the 1950s, and the gun lobby invented the slogan “Guns don’t kill people. People kill people.” as early as the 1920s. • In 2009, following the unprecedented disaster of Hurricane Katrina and Al Gore’s wildly successful documentary An Inconvenient Truth, it seemed the world was waking up and ready to act on climate. The forces of denial, however, would intercede and manufacture a fake ‘scandal’ in the weeks leading up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen – subsequently known as ‘Climategate’. Thousands of emails between climate scientists were stolen from a university computer server in the UK. Bits and pieces of emails were disingenuously rearranged and taken out of context – leading to claims of proof that climate change was an elaborate hoax. • These inactivists have since been forced into retreat from ‘hard’ climate denial and moved to ‘softer’ denial: downplaying, deflecting, dividing, delaying, and despair- mongering. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 39. If you don’t admit you don’t know what’s happening, you can never find out, and if you don’t find out, you can never change it. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 40. Feeling (feel good) Fluency (be recognisable) • The most important step in changing anything is admitting that you don’t know. That’s the power of ignorance. Great problems solvers are not afraid to say: “I don’t know.” From that start point, they can investigate with an open mind, and often come up with some ingenious approaches. The author looks at 8 areas: 1. What you don’t know you don’t know. 2. We can’t know what hasn’t happened. 3. Ignorance is a secret weapon. 4. Simple is smart. Complicated is stupid. 5. The power of an open mind. 6. Ignorance we can fix. Stupid we can’t. 7. Real ignorance beats fast knowledge. 8. Thinking we know is a trap. • People who feel secure have no need to take chances, but people who feel insecure have to take chances. • People will judge what they need based on what their competition has. • Semiotics is language without words. In the 1960s, Margaret Calvert designed the UK’s road signage system. She tested them by driving them at some airmen at 100mph – the context in which they would be seen. She made the complicated simple: motorways would be white on blue, A roads, white on green (with yellow numbers), and B roads black on white. Triangles for warnings; circles for commands; squares for information. • In publishing, there is something called publication bias or the Woozle Effect (named after the Winnie-the-Pooh story in which they believe they are following a Woozle, when they are following their own footsteps). Once a journalist cites something, another takes it as fact, and it snowballs from there, but it might not be true. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 41. Success is not achieved by the genius of any one leader, but through commitment to a set of well-defined and rigorously executed principles and practices. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 42. Feeling (feel good) Fluency (be recognisable) • This book contains insights, stories and secrets from inside Amazon. • Since the early days, the company has stood by 4 core principles: obsess over customers, it’s all about the long term, we will continue to learn from both our successes and failures, and operational excellence. These led to a series of 14 leadership principles. 1. Customer obsession: start with the customer and work backwards. 2. Ownership: leaders act on behalf of the whole company. 3. Invent and simplify: look for new ideas from everywhere. 4. Are right, a lot: leaders have strong judgment and good instincts. 5. Learn and be curious: you never stop learning. 6. Hire and develop the best: raise the performance bar with every hire. 7. Insist on the highest standards: relentlessly. 8. Think big: thinking small is a self-fulfilling prophecy. 9. Bias for action: speed matters in business. 10. Frugality: accomplish more with less. 11. Earn trust: listen attentively and speak candidly. 12. Dive deep: operate at all levels and stay connected. 13. Have backbone; disagree and commit - discuss, then commit wholly. 14. Deliver results: be accountable. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 43. You can fight the biases that distort decision- making by learning to recognize them and using a range of techniques. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 44. Feeling (feel good) Fluency (be recognisable) • This book asks the reader: When was the last time you listened to someone, or someone really listened to you? As a society we have forgotten how to listen. • Modern life is noisy and frenetic, and technology provides constant distraction (some people are now officially addicted to distraction.) So we tune things out or listen selectively – even to those we love most. We have become scared of other people’s points of view, and of silence. People are uncomfortable with gaps in conversation. It’s called dead air. • At work, we are taught to lead the conversation. On social media we shape our personal narratives. At parties we talk over one another. So do politicians. No one is listening. • Listening is about curiosity and patience – asking the right questions in the right way. It has the potential to transform our relationships, improve our self-knowledge, and increase our creativity and happiness. • We listen best when we are in sync with the other person. • We use assumptions as earplugs, thinking that we know what the other person is going to say. The closeness-communication bias means that we overestimate our ability to know what those closest to us are trying to say. • We think faster than we speak, so there is a speech-thought differential. • None of us is ‘woke’ or fully awake to the realities of people who are unlike us. One can only speak for one’s self. • Listening to opposing views makes us more entrenched, not more open-minded. Many people now show the traits of hyperpartisanship. Good listeners have negative capability – the ability to handle uncertainty without becoming irritable. Look for evidence that you might be wrong. greatesthitsblog.com
  • 45. • Be inquisitive • Make the time • Understand the lines of argument • Have a point of view • Inform your work • Enjoy the debate • Ask Kevin to speak or train greatesthitsblog.com
  • 46. greatesthitsblog.com Ask Kevin to speak or train: 07979 808770 kevinduncanexpertadvice@gmail.com expertadviceonline.com