The Books that are Changing the Way I Work
I’m on the road a lot, which has its ups and downs, but one perk is having big blocks of undisturbed time to read on the plane. As the head of a design and innovation company, you’d think I’d read about design and innovation. Instead, it tends to be histories, biographies, and creative nonfiction that help me discover new ways to approach the many challenges we face—both as a company and as human beings. Here are four titles I read last year that are changing the way I work now:
1. Leonardo da Vinci by Walter Isaacson
Walter Isaacson, the biographer behind Kissinger and Steve Jobs, turns his attention to the original Renaissance man—perhaps the most curious person who ever lived. Isaacson draws from 7,200 pages of the artist’s notebooks to trace his journey as inventor, painter, doctor, sculptor, and scientist. Da Vinci was both a procrastinator and a perfectionist, both exuberant and introspective—and his life holds valuable lessons for creatives today. Read the book.
2. Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies and Companies by Geoffrey West
Presenting something of a “theory of everything,” West says we can apply the same mathematical principles that govern growth in nature to complex political, corporate, and civic systems. What they all have in common is their response to a rapid increase in size. As cities, companies or human beings grow, they require more resources, which leads to innovations like higher wages and new products, but also negative consequences like waste and overcrowding. As he unpacks the physics of modern systems design, West cautions that growth must be matched by greater sustainability. Read the book.
3. Heroic Leadership: Best Practices from a 450-Year-Old Company That Changed the World by Chris Lowney
Before he became an investment banker at JP Morgan, Chris Lowney spent seven years as a Jesuit priest. That background in the cloth helped him realize that the issues he faced in nurturing new leaders at JP Morgan were the same ones the Jesuit order had faced over its 450-year history. The Jesuits focus not on what leaders should do, but on who they are. They contend that leadership springs from within and involves a never-ending process of self-examination and learning. The four pillars of leadership that inform the Jesuits’ “corporate culture” are: self-awareness (understanding your strengths, weaknesses, and values), ingenuity (innovating and adapting to a changing world), love (engaging others with a loving attitude), and heroism (energizing yourself and others with heroic ambitions). Can you imagine if every corporate leader embraced these principles? Read the book.
4. Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist by Kate Raworth
Doughnut analogies do a lot to sweeten economics. What, Raworth suggests, if we positioned society within a “doughnut” made of two rings: an inner ring that represents the minimum amount of food, shelter, and other necessities a person needs, and an outer ring that represents the point at which greater consumption begins to damage the Earth beyond repair? That question, along with the author’s case for a more compassionate, sustainable economic model, dovetails with our interest in advancing the circular economy. Finally, an economics explainer that makes sense to designers like me. Read the book.
Professor Innovation Management and Global Crusader and Futurist. Donald Trump: "To Hubert. Always think big"
5 年https://bit.ly/2P8TPXO?
Implementation Lead at Bendigo and Adelaide Bank
6 年Eula Mae Gonzales
Tim, did you already read "The World Without Us" by Alan Weisman?
Design Thinker
6 年They look like a worthy reading list.
English Teacher at Holy Names Upward Bound
6 年Currently I’m enjoying Visual Intelligence.