2. WHAT IS IT?
âą A library of 200 books
âą A blog
âą A series of printed books
âą A pair of apps
âą One-page summaries
âą One-sentence summaries
âą A rich source of ideas
4. ANTIFRAGILE
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Antifragile things get stronger when
subjected to stress and tension,
whereas fragile things break and
robust ones simply stay the same.
5. ANTIFRAGILE
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
ï± Procrustean bed: retrofitting causes
ï± Fragilistas: cause fragility by thinking they
understand
ï± Barbell strategy: safe and speculative extremes
ï± Ludic fallacy: mistake experiments with real world
ï± Turkeys and inverse turkeys
ï± Green lumber fallacy: unnecessary knowledge
ï± Extremistan: impact of a single observation
ï± Iatrogenics: harm done by the healer
ï± Agency problem: manager is not true owner
ï± Black swan errors
7. GREAT BY CHOICE
Jim Collins
Great companies thrive despite
uncertainty, chaos and luck by
deploying fanatic discipline,
empirical creativity, and productive
paranoia.
8. GREAT BY CHOICE
Jim Collins
ï± 10Xers companies have beaten their industry by a
minimum of ten times over 15 years. Their
characteristics are:
ï± Fanatic discipline â considered decisions with
clear constraints
ï± Empirical creativity â as opposed to
uncalibrated cannonballs
ï± Productive paranoia â being hypervigilant by
constantly zooming in and out (detail v. big
picture)
ï± Do the 20 Mile March
ï± Fire bullets, then cannonballs
9. WILFUL BLINDNESS
Margaret Heffernan
We become blind to the truth
because we are hard wired to stick
to what we know best, and we then
unwittingly use a range of
techniques to persuade ourselves
itâs okay.
10. WILFUL BLINDNESS
Margaret Heffernan
ï± Affinity
ï± Love is blind
ï± Dangerous convictions
ï± Mental limits
ï± The ostrich instruction
ï± Just following orders
ï± Out of sight, out of mind
ï± Structured dissonance
ï± Cassandra whistleblowers
11. TELL THE TRUTH
Unerman & Salem Baskin
In an age of information overload,
the most effective way for a brand to
stand out is to tell the truth.
12. TELL THE TRUTH
Unerman & Salem Baskin
Content:
ï± Acknowledge reality
ï± Deliver real change to services and company
structure
ï± Take consumers on the brand truth journey
ï± Enlist third-party advocates
Context:
ï± Be close
ï± Find a Truth Turning Point
ï± Use point-of-action media
ï± Leverage routine
14. THE FILTER BUBBLE
Eli Pariser
You can get stuck in a static, ever-
narrowing version of yourself â a filter
bubble â if you are unaware of the
way in which the internet filters your
search information.
15. THE FILTER BUBBLE
Eli Pariser
ï± A filter bubble is the unique universe of information
for each of us that only we see.
ï± It has three main characteristics:
â 1. Youâre alone in it
â 2. Itâs invisible
â 3. You donât choose to enter it
ï± You can get stuck in a static, ever-narrowing
version of yourself â an endless You-loop.
ï± We could be giving ourselves a âglobal lobotomy.â
ï± The headline that has everything:
âWoman in sumo wrestler suit assaulted her ex-
girlfriend in gay pub after she waved at a man
dressed as a Snickers bar.â
16. DIGITAL VERTIGO
Andrew Keen
Todayâs online social revolution is
dividing, diminishing and disorienting
us - the more electronically
connected we become, the lonelier
we seem to be.
17. DIGITAL VERTIGO
Andrew Keen
ï± Stuck between internet longings for community
and powerful desire for online individual freedom.
ï± The more electronically connected we become,
the lonelier we seem to be.
ï± âI update, therefore I am.â For extreme users, their
internet profile has become their raison dâetre.
ï± Information narcissists uninterested in anything
âoutside ourselvesâ.
ï± Engaged in an Age of Great Exhibitionism.
ï± Human implications of Cult of the Social?
ï± What happens to privacy when everyone is
subject to frictionless sharing in a transparent
network?
18. GROUPED
Paul Adams
Small groups of friends are the key to
influence on the social web.
19. GROUPED
Paul Adams
ï± Social networks not new, social web here to stay.
ï± Sharing is a means to an end â it makes life easier.
ï± Our social networks are made up of small
independent groups, connected through us.
ï± The people closest to us have disproportionate
influence over us.
ï± When spreading ideas, network structure is more
important than characteristics of the individuals.
ï± How we behave is learned from observing others.
ï± Many decisions made by nonconscious, emotional
brain - 200,000 times conscious brain capacity.
ï± Weâre wired to avoid trying new things - habit bias.
ï± People turn to their friends for information
21. THINKING FAST AND SLOW
Daniel Kahneman
Be aware that your brain has two
systems â fast intuition and slower
conscious thought â and allow for
these when looking at decisions.
22. THINKING FAST AND SLOW
Daniel Kahneman
ï± The mind is divided into two systems:
â System 1: makes fast, intuitive decisions based on associative
memory, vivid images and emotional reactions.
â System 2: slower, conscious, hard thought â more rational but
frequently overridden.
ï± WYSIATI (What You See Is All There Is): jumping to
conclusions based on limited evidence.
ï± Affect heuristic: making judgements based on
emotions: (How do I feel about?) is a surrogate for
a harder question (What do I think about it?).
ï± Premortem: just before committing to something
important, imagine itâs a year on and it was a
disaster - write a short history of what happened.
24. DRINKING FROM THE FIRE HOSE
Frank & Magnone
You can avoid drowning in data by
asking seven simple questions.
25. DRINKING FROM THE FIRE HOSE
Frank & Magnone
ï± Spray and Pray is too common
ï± Seven questions based on discovery, insight, and
delivery:
ï± 1. What is the essential business question?
ï± 2. Where is your customerâs North Star?
ï± 3. Should you believe the squiggly line?
ï± 4. What surprised you?
ï± 5. What does the lighthouse reveal?
ï± 6. Who are your swing voters?
ï± 7. The three Ws: What? So what? Now what?
27. IMAGINE
Jonah Lehrer
Ideas come from sheer
persistence, but only when we relax,
so if you work hard enough on
something, and focus on not being
focused, there will eventually be an
unconcealing.
28. IMAGINE
Jonah Lehrer
ï± Muses, higher powers and creative âtypesâ are
myths
ï± Creativity is not a âgiftâ that only some possess â itâs
a catch-all for distinct thought processes that we
can all learn to use more effectively.
ï± Itâs only after weâve stopped searching for an
answer that it arrives.
ï± Breakthroughs follow a âstumped phaseâ.
ï± Trying to force insights can often prevent themâ
ideas arrive when the mind is distracted or relaxed.
ï± Focus on not being focused.
ï± Ideas occur best in âthird placesâ â neither the
home nor the office.
29. INSANELY SIMPLE
Ken Segall
Work as hard as you can to make
everything as simple as it can
possibly be.
30. INSANELY SIMPLE
Ken Segall
ï± Think brutal
ï± Think small: small groups get more done
ï± Think minimal: just communicate one thing
ï± Think motion: momentum is crucial to projects
ï± Think iconic: essence in a conceptual image
ï± Think phrasal: use short simple words
ï± Think casual: no big company thinking and process
ï± Think human: be true to your feelings
ï± Think sceptic: expect negative first reactions of
ï± Think war: extreme times call for extreme measures
32. READ THIS BEFORE YOUR NEXT MEETING
Al Pittampalli
Reducing the number and length of
meetings increases productivity.
33. READ THIS BEFORE YOUR NEXT MEETING
Al Pittampalli
ï± Traditional meetings create a culture of
compromise and kill our sense of urgency.
ï± 1. Meet only to support a decision that has already been
made
ï± 2. Move fast and end on schedule
ï± 3. Limit the number of attendees
ï± 4. Reject the unprepared
ï± 5. Produce committed action plans
ï± 6. Refuse to be informational. Reading the memo
beforehand is mandatory
ï± 7. Work alongside brainstorms, not against them
34. RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
âą Be inquisitive
âą Make the time
âą Understand the lines of argument
âą Take a view
âą Inform your work
âą Enjoy the debate
35. KEVIN DUNCAN
07979 808770
kevinduncan@expertadvice.co.uk
Twitter: @kevinduncan
www.greatesthitsblog.com