Showing posts with label blockchain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blockchain. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2019

Variety of Business Books ...


Quick summary of some recently released books related to business:

NEW TO BIG is written by David Kidder and Christina Wallace, both of whom have extensive entrepreneurial experience and currently work together at Bionic, a company designed to ignite growth within larger companies. Their text explores “How Companies Can Create Like Entrepreneurs, Invest Like VCs, and Install a Permanent Operating System for Growth.”  Kidder and Wallace assert that “the refounding of iconic companies – including the development of the next generation of growth leaders within those companies – is the most significant opportunity and the greatest leadership challenge of our era.”  They provide historical context, but, more importantly, outline “crucial mind-set shifts” like moving from “planning in a known share-based world, to … [focusing] on discovering a brand-new customer problem or need.” Kidder and Wallace refer to this outside-in thinking as the Total Addressable Problem (TAP) model and provide examples like mobile phones. They spend another chapter on turning operators into creators by shifting thinking so as to embrace productive failure, end the addiction to being right, or to “build ladders to the moon,” amongst other suggestions. This “toolkit” format is very engaging and will likely appeal to practitioners as well as merit review by our business students. NEW TO BIG received positive reviews from Clayton Christensen, Adam Grant and others. About ten percent is allocated to appendix, notes and index.

HOW LEADERS DECIDE by Greg Bustin is subtitled “A Timeless Guide to Making Tough Choices.” To motivate and inform business leaders, Bustin has provided 52 decision situations, designed to be read one per week over the course of a year. He accompanies each story with a thought-provoking question (e.g., If you were honored for your life’s work, what achievement would you celebrate? What legacy would you leave?). Unfortunately, Bustin chose to profile white males, almost exclusively. And he also tended to select well-known individuals (e.g., Julius Caesar, John Adams, and Winston Churchill) so this work has less impact and inspirational decision-making advice than might otherwise be the case. Perhaps for his next project, Bustin could explore additional biographical sketches and create a newer version of Frank Olsen’s Inventors Who Left Their Brands on America?  In the meantime, readers could also consider turning to titles like The Third Door (featuring advice from contemporary leaders and innovators) or They Made America (with a more historical perspective although he includes women and immigrants) by Harold Evans.  In addition, Berger’s The Big Book of Beautiful Questions, Case’s Be Fearless or Morten’s Great at Work offer valuable leadership advice.

BLOCKCHAIN: THE NEXT EVERYTHING by Stephen P. Williams is an attempt to explain what blockchain is and how it works.  He defines blockchain as software and “strings of code” or “a simple technology [that] serves as a permanent, unhackable ledger for almost any kind of information you would like to record” such as the bitcoin transactions for which it was originally developed. Subsequent sections of this text discuss various innovative and potential new applications, with some related to energy futures, climate change and environment, others to artistic endeavors. Despite labelling the science and technology of blockchain as “challenging,” he writes that “it won’t be long until using blockchain will be about as tough as watching a movie on Netflix." To me, Williams struggles to truly describe blockchain; at one point, he recommends turning to YouTube for better understanding. Obviously, this technology is still evolving and Williams himself writes, “blockchain will most likely be superseded in the future by something that works even better. … distributed systems [with no central authority or control] … promise to transform how we do business, communicate and govern.” 

BIG BUSINESS: A Love Letter to an American Anti-Hero by Tyler Cowen (Average is Over) comprises a set of musings on aspects of the American corporation. Cowen, professor of economics at George Mason University, first provides “a new pro-business manifesto.” Other chapters explore whether CEOs are paid too much, how monopolistic big business might be, and whether the big tech companies are evil. In response, Cowen asserts that “on the whole our CEOs are providing good value for the money they earn;” that although “K-12 education is arguably an example of a big monopoly problem … the analysts who raise this issue [more generally] usually are exaggerating the problem;” and “America’s tech sector is increasingly underrated [due in part to less than objective media coverage].” Our students have recently shown increased interest in researching the values of socialism and would undoubtedly be interested in the questions that Cowen raises, although they would might be less apt to agree with his generally pro-business argument. Clearly Cowen raises issues and responds to critics while sharing a great deal of emotion, caveats, and opinion in this accessible text; roughly twenty percent of BIG BUSINESS provides additional detail through references, notes and an index.