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Reading, Writing re: Management

Occasional posts on business books, their authors and publishers, tidbits from my book and article research, quotes from interviews with experts and executives, and hopefully, not too much self-promotional bushwa.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Bizbook review haiku: Appetite for Innovation by M. Pilar Opazo

Yummy elBulli's an innovation test lab not just for foodies














http://cup.columbia.edu/book/appetite-for-innovation/9780231176781

Posted by Theodore Kinni at 1:04 PM  

Labels: bizbook review haiku, books, business history, corporate success, creativity, innovation, strategy

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About me

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Theodore Kinni
A seasoned business writer and editor, I work with leading consultants, corporations and non-profits, across sectors and geographies, to craft compelling content. The kinds of writing and editing that I do: • Books. I have played an instrumental role in the creation of more than 20 business books, as a named author, ghostwriter or editor. • White papers and reports. I’ve ghostwritten and edited more than 100 white papers and reports. • Articles, op-eds and reviews. I’ve written, ghostwritten and edited hundreds of pieces for business magazines, newspapers, blogs and web sites.
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Some of my stuff

  • What experience would you like with that?
  • The Thought Leader Interview: Rita Gunther McGrath
  • Pride goeth before a profit
  • Daniel Pink's new pitch
  • Now what shall we call this widget?
  • Algae at a pump near you?
  • s+b's Best Business Books 2013
  • s+b's Best Business Books 2008
  • How to bring innovations to market
  • The art of appreciative inquiry
  • Bottling customer experience
  • Loosen up your communication style
  • Measuring your way to market insight
  • Funny business
  • Chinese dragon, hidden treasure
  • Bedside manner goes high-tech

Online resources for business readers & writers

  • Alibris -- used & out of print book site
  • BusinessJournalism.org -- writing resources from the Reynolds Center for Business Journalism
  • Critical Mass -- NBCC blog
  • Deloitte Capital H Blog
  • Igor Int'l on naming follies
  • Insights by Stanford Business
  • Knowledge@Wharton -- Wharton's e-letter
  • Literary Services, Inc. -- bizbooks superagent John Willig
  • ManyBooks.net -- public domain e-books
  • MIT Sloan Management Review
  • MobileRead Networks -- e-readers commune
  • NYT's weekly Books Update e-letter
  • Project Gutenberg -- the original e-book site
  • ProPublica -- investigative journalism
  • Purple Shark -- fast, professional transcription
  • strategy + business -- sharp thinking from Booz & Company
  • Working Knowledge -- the HBS e-letter

Business in Fiction

"And by this time his financial morality had become special and local in its character. He did not think it was wise for any one to steal anything from anybody where the act of taking or profiting was directly and plainly considered stealing. That was unwise — dangerous — hence wrong. There were so many situations wherein what one might do in the way of taking or profiting was open to discussion and doubt. Morality varied, in his mind at least, with conditions, if not climates." --Theodore Dreiser, The Financier (1912)

"Had not a long, practical struggle with life taught him that sentiment in business was folly?" --Theodore Dreiser, An American Tragedy (1925)

"Be nice to incompetents and they'll be nice back. Be nasty and they'll still be incompetent, so what do you gain by making an enemy?" --John Burdett, Bangkok 8 (2003)

"The world has no pity on a man who can't do or produce something it thinks worth money." --George Gissing, New Grub Street (1891)

"Even the building was creepy: long windowless corridors and flights of stairs that stripped your sense of direction to nothing, tepid canned air with too little oxygen, a low witless hum of computers and suppressed voices, huge tracts of cubicles like a mad scientist's rat mazes." --Tana French, In The Woods (2007)

"Only a lunatic would fail to distinguish between himself and his representative self. This banal distinction may be most obvious in the workplace, where invariably one must avail oneself of an even-tempered, abnormally-industrious dummy stand-in, who, precisely because it is a dummy, makes life easier for all others, who are themselves present, which is to say, represented, by dummies of their own." -- Joseph O'Neill, The Dog (2014)

He had indeed conversed so entirely with money, that it may be almost doubted whether he imagined there was any other thing really existing in the world; this at least may be certainly averred, that he firmly believed nothing else to have any real value." -- Henry Fielding, Tom Jones (1749)

"You invariably find among CEOs that life is business. There is an operative cruelty which is seen as an entitlement." -- E.L. Doctorow, City of God (2000)

"Employers are like horses. They require management." --P.G. Wodehouse, Carry On, Jeeves (1925)

"SECRETS ARE LIES
CARING IS SHARING
PRIVACY IS THEFT"--Dave Eggers, The Circle (2013)

"A desk is a dangerous place from which to watch the world." -- John LeCarré, The Honourable Schoolboy (1977)

"I can well imagine forms of servitude worse than our own, because more insidious, whether they transform men into stupid, complacent machines, who believe themselves free just when they are most subjugated, or whether to the exclusion of leisure and other pleasures essential to man they develop a passion for work as violent as the passion for war among barbarous races." -- Marguerite Yourcenar,
Memoirs of Hadrian (1963)

"Because if you truly want to become filthy rich in rising Asia, as we appear to have established that you do, then sooner or later, you must work for yourself. The fruits of labor are delicious, but individually they're not particularly fattening. So don't share yours, and munch on those of others whenever you can." -- Mohsin Hamid,
How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, (2013)

"They copied all they could follow,

but they couldn't copy my mind.
So I left 'em sweating and stealing,
a year and a half behind." -- Rudyard Kipling, The Mary Gloster (1894)

"The only thing you got in this world is what you can sell. And the funny thing is you're a salesman, and you don't know that." -- Arthur Miller,
Death of a Salesman
(1949)

"Every exercise of power incorporates a faint, almost imperceptible, element of contempt for those over whom the power is exercised." -- Sandor Marai, Embers (1942)

"Go to a tea shop anywhere along the Ganga, sir, and look at the men working in that tea shop--men, I say, but better to call them human spiders that go crawling in between and under the tables with rags in their hands, crushed humans in crushed uniforms, sluggish, unshaven, in their thirties or forties but still 'boys.' But that is your fate if you do your job well--with honesty, dedication, and sincerity, the way Gandhi would have done it, no doubt.

I did my job with near total dishonesty, lack of dedication, and insincerity--and so the tea shop was a profoundly enriching experience." -- Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger (2008)

"'Alex. Are you still buying advertising space?'
'For as long as the job doesn't require one to have a brain.'
'It's always nice to talk to a man who enjoys his work.'
'Fortunately I enjoy the money a whole lot better.'" -- Philip Kerr, The Pale Criminal (1990)

"'Oilmen are gamblers, most of them, and they'd rather take a little chance than spend a lot of money. Or wait for the technology to catch up.' He added after a moment, 'They're not the only gamblers. We're all in the game. We all drive cars, and we're all hooked on oil. The question is how we can get unhooked before we drown in the stuff'" -- Ross Macdonald, Sleeping Beauty (1973)

"I'm tempted to point out that our dealings, however unusual and close, were the dealings of businessmen. My ease with this state of affairs no doubt reveals a shortcoming on my part, but it's the same quality that enables me to thrive at work, where so many of the brisk, tough, successful men I meet are secretly sick to their stomachs about their quarterlies, are being eaten alive by bosses and clients and all-seeing wives and judgmental offspring, and are, in sum, desperate to be taken at face value and very happy to reciprocate the courtesy." -- Joseph O'Neill, Netherland (2008)

"I think that I shall never see
A billboard lovely as a tree.
Perhaps, unless the billboards fall,
I'll never see a tree at all."
-- Ogden Nash, Song of the Open Road, Happy Days (1933)

"When I go into the back entrance to our business, I smell the beans and the roasters and antiseptic-lacquered-with-fruit smell of the floor cleanser, and then, even more faintly, the strange bleary artificiality in the air, characteristic of enclosed shopping malls. The ion content in the oxygen has been tampered with by people trying to save money by giving you less oxygen to breathe. You get light-headed and desperate to shop. The air smells machine-manufactured, and the light looks manufactured or maybe recycled from previous light." -- Charles Baxter, The Feast of Love (2000)

"Some of us loved killing an hour of the company's time and others felt guilty for it afterward. But whatever your personal feelings on the matter, you still had to account for the hour, so you billed it to a client. By the end of the fiscal year, our clients had paid us a substantial amount of money to sit around and bullshit, expenses they then passed on to you, the consumer. It was a cost of doing business, but some of us feared it was an indication that the end was near, like the profligacy that preceded the downfall of the Roman Empire. There was so much money involved, and some even trickled down to us, a small amount that allowed us to live among the top one-percent of the wealthiest in the world. It was lasting fun, until the layoffs came." -- Joshua Ferris, Then We Came To The End (2007)

"The last line was so far away that the men were specks-bobbing bug-like fixtures, moving in what seemed to be a rainbow-haze of reds and yellows and blues. Those were the spray-painters, Simpson explained, and some of them made as much as seven dollars a day. He did not explain that they had no teeth after six months, little eyesight after a year, and that their occupational expectancy was about three years. In all likelihood he was not acquainted with these facts, and he would have been annoyed at their recital. To the best of his knowledge, there wasn't any law compelling a man to be a spray-painter." -- Jim Thompson, Heed the Thunder (1946)

"Since those birds were up around the top, the top numbers in one of the three biggest agencies in the country, with corner rooms at least twenty by twenty and incomes in the six figures, it had of course been years since any of them had personally dialed a number in an office. To expect them to would be against all reason" -- Rex Stout, Before Midnight (1955)

"What I'm getting at, Bobby, is you may notice, over time, as you study and learn, a certain amount of chicanery in this business of ours. But don't let that dismay you. It's just the nature of the business we're in, part and parcel of the good old capitalist system that's gonna make us both rich men before we die." -- Clancy Martin, How to Sell (2009)

"I'm a bookkeeper, and, the way I see it, there's nothing to life but bookkeeping...One rule is this: that if the risk of a transaction is very great it should not be considered at all, no matter what profit it offers if it is successful. That's one of the basic rules that should never be broken. You apply that rule to the idea of committing a murder and what do you get? There's too much risk, so you don't do it. The idea is no good. It's all a matter of debit and credit..." -- Rex Stout, Prisoner's Base (1952)

"I must look Ralph up and question him. He'll be in hiding by now, of course, but he's worth hunting out. He always has the most consistently logical and creditable reasons for having done the most idiotic things. He is" - as if that explained it - "an advertising man." -- Dashiell Hammett, The Dain Curse (1929)

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What Ted has read lately

Superbosses: How Exceptional Leaders Master the Flow of Talent
really liked it
Superbosses: How Exceptional Leaders Master the Flow of Talent
by Sydney Finkelstein
Terrific playbook for becoming a talent magnet in your company and industry
The Orphan Master's Son
it was amazing
The Orphan Master's Son
by Adam Johnson
Terrific novel set in North Korea-Orwellian and Dickensian at the same time.
Magic and Loss: The Internet as Art
liked it
Magic and Loss: The Internet as Art
by Virginia Heffernan
A bid to create a "complete aesthetics--and poetics--of the Internet."
Dealstorming: The Secret Weapon That Can Solve Your Toughest Sales Challenges
really liked it
Dealstorming: The Secret Weapon That Can Solve Your Toughest Sales Challenges
by Tim Sanders
First book I've seen on what has to happen backstage--within the seller's company--to close big, complex, winner-take-all sales.
American Gods
it was amazing
American Gods
by Neil Gaiman
Great read that marries mythology with modern-day America
Shakey: Neil Young's Biography
it was amazing
Shakey: Neil Young's Biography
by Jimmy McDonough
A great bio, a must-read for Young fans, and terrific insight into the creative process and how to keep it alive
The Blackhouse
it was amazing
The Blackhouse
by Peter May
Terrific murder mystery set in Hebrides
Agile Talent: How to Source and Manage Outside Experts
liked it
Agile Talent: How to Source and Manage Outside Experts
by Jon Younger
Addresses a big problem: the inability of companies to get full value from external talent. Academic-style read. The solutions are aimed at big companies that hire a lot of outside help.
Some Buried Caesar
really liked it
Some Buried Caesar
by Rex Stout
Nero and Archie get embroiled in a double murder on the way to an orchid competition upstate. Good one
City on Fire
really liked it
City on Fire
by Garth Risk Hallberg
Adding Hallberg to my authors to watch list. Ambitious and mostly terrific novel set in NYC in late 70s. Could have been cut by a third, but the characters and story-telling pulled me thru.

goodreads.com