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Author - Robert I. Sutton ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Hardcover Book item from Free Press was reviewed on 11-Dec-2008. Search ISBN:B00008JYQ8 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation Reference Book. Classifications : General Business & Investing Bargain Books Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General AAS Business & Investing Bargain Books Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books Subjects Arts & Photography Biograph . Click the following link to view the cover of Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation. Related topics: General. Bargain Books. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. General AAS. Bargain Books. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. requestid: daef1694-be79-43d6-b3e1-403a91fc7bc8requestprocessingtime: 0.1274750000000000 salesrank: 1260019 edition: 1st numberofitems: 1 1) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. "Weird Ideas That Work" works! This is one of the most compelling books I´ve read in a long time. Sutton manages not only to come up with ideas that seem weird at first glance, but to actually prove them useful and logical at the same time.
2) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. I was a big fan of Sutton´s Knowing-Doing gap that offered a real solution to a real problem. This book had an unreal feel to it for me though.
3) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. All activities need both effective routine and regular innovation. Consider the difference. There are times when it makes sense to do the same thing right, over and over again, without slipping. But there are also times, and types of activities, where doing something in a very new and different way is essential. The real-life examples in this book support these 11½ methods for finding new ways of doing things, and producing new kinds of products and services. Worthwhile reading for anyone who wants to inject a little spice into the routine of software development and delivery.¤ 4) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. This is a wonderful but dangerous book. The 11 and 1/2 weird ideas it contains are terrific, exciting and slippery. Use them right and you could transform your company into a hotbed of innovation. Use them wrong and you could also transform your company into a disorganized mess. Author Robert I. Sutton clearly explains that some situations do not require innovation - that they are, in fact, terrible settings for new things. Companies focus on the routine for an extremely logical reason: it makes money now. Identifying situations that can make money with routine work versus circumstances that require change is a tough distinction, particularly since innovation requires many failures, disrupts your culture and forces you to take a rough look into the future. We thus recommend this book to a select group: those who know their fields and organizations extremely well. If you can see clearly through both the current jargon that promotes innovation and your organization´s often unspoken prejudices, you will find this book exciting and extremely productive.¤ 5) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. This book is a useful and fun read. It offers some solid ideas for innovation but the ideas are labeled in order to draw attention. For instance, the first idea is, "Hire "slow learners"", however the intention behind this is just hire stubborn people who are unaffected by others opinions and norms. These people will go against the standards and breed creativity. Another idea is "Find some happy people and make them fight" with the basic idea behind this technique being get optimistic people, who are naturally more creative. Put them in a room together and let them bounce ideas together until a new and improved idea is created.
6) Hardcover Book Weird Ideas That Work: 11 1/2 Practices for Promoting, Managing, and Sustaining Innovation by Free Press. Creativity, new ideas, innovation -- in any age they are keys to success, but in today´s whirlwind economy they are essential for survival itself. Yet, as Robert Sutton explains, the standard rules of business behavior and management are precisely the opposite of what it takes to build an innovative company. We are told to hire people who will fit in; to train them extensively; and to work to instill a corporate culture in every employee. In fact, in order to foster creativity, we should hire misfits, goad them to fight, and pay them to defy convention and undermine the prevailing culture. Weird Ideas That Work codifies these and other proven counterintuitive ideas to help you turn your workplace from staid and safe to wild and woolly -- and creative. Stanford professor Robert Sutton is an authority on innovation and a popular speaker. In Weird Ideas That Work he draws on extensive research in behavioral psychology to explain how innovation can be fostered in hiring, managing, and motivating people; building teams; making decisions; and interacting with outsiders. Business practices like "hire people who make you uncomfortable," "reward success and failure, but punish inaction," and "decide to do something that will probably fail, and then convince yourself and everyone else that success is certain" strike many managers as strange or even downright wrong. Yet Weird Ideas That Work shows how some of the best teams and companies use these and other counterintuitive practices to crank out new ideas, and it demonstrates that every company can reap sales and profits from such creativity. Weird Ideas That Work is filled with examples of each of Sutton´s 11 1/2 practices, drawn from hi- and low-tech industries, manufacturing and services, information and products. More than just a set of bizarre suggestions, it represents a breakthrough in management thinking: Sutton shows that the practices we need to sustain performance are in constant tension with those that foster new ideas. The trick is to choose the right balance between conventional and "weird" -- and now, thanks to Robert Sutton´s work, we have the tools we need to do so.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 8-Jan-2009, , 680-871-041-401-221-Q8B-8
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