

Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World - Kindle edition by Grant, Adam, Sandberg, Sheryl. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World. Review: Being Original is a learnable skill -- start with this book - Adam Grant titled his book: Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World, but thatâs not exactly right. Hereâs how he describes what it means to be original in this book. âOriginality itself starts with creativity: generating a concept that is both novel and useful. But it doesnât stop there. Originals are people who take the initiative to make their visions a reality.â The good news is that originality is not a fixed trait. Like many other things in life, you can develop your skills and get better over time. Thatâs what Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World is about. If youâre interested in being more original, or in making a contribution to the world, or in having a more satisfying life, this book will help you. The core of Originals is made up of eight chapters. Creative Destruction: The Risky Business of Going Against the Grain Blind Inventors and One-Eyed Investors: The Art and Science of Recognizing Original Ideas Out On a Limb: Speaking the Truth to Power Fools Rush In: Timing, Strategic Procrastination, and The First Mover Disadvantage Goldilocks and The Trojan Horse: Creating and Maintaining Coalitions Rebel With a Cause: How Siblings, Parents, and Mentors Nurture Originality Rethinking Groupthink: The Myths of Strong Cultures, Cults, and Devilâs Advocates Rocking The Boat and Keeping It Steady: Managing Anxiety, Apathy, Ambivalence, and Anger Thereâs also a section called âActions for Impact.â Itâs an excellent overview of the material in the book with good advice on how to put what youâve read about into practice. Brand New Insights I identified two kinds of insights in the book. The first were, if youâll pardon the expression, âOriginal.â Here are a few. I learned that a sense of security in one realm of life makes us able to take risks in another realm of life. Those risk-taking entrepreneurs arenât risk-takers all the time. Instead, they and we maintain a kind of risk portfolio. That made perfect sense when I read it, but Iâd never thought of things that way before. I found many insights in this book about judging and presenting ideas. Iâve spent most of my adult life as a writer and speaker, but the book produced several âaha!â moments. There are lots of insights on parenting. Theyâre the sort of thing I wish I had known decades ago. Now I plan to pass them on to my children who have children of their own. If youâre in business and looking for the people who can make your business go and grow thereâs lots of good advice for you. Read about the hiring blueprints (professional, star, and commitment) and how they work (or donât) in different situations. Insights that Deepened Understanding There are also lots of insights here that deepened my understanding. Grant describes things that match my experience, but by describing them and analyzing them, he added the âwhyâ to make my experience and understanding richer. Hereâs one example in a quote from the book. âResearch demonstrates that it is the most creative children who are the least likely to become the teacherâs pet.â That was me. I was the kid that was always coming up with a new idea about how to do things, and I most definitely was not my teachersâ pets. After reading Originals I understood the situation better than before. Hereâs another example. Iâve known for years that it wasnât necessarily an advantage to be the first mover in an industry. What Grant added for me was some of the reasons why. A Small Quibble I only have a quibble with one part of the book, and it truly is a quibble, not a major issue. Grant describes how some originals procrastinate creatively. My quibble is that I donât call what he describes âprocrastination.â For me, âprocrastinationâ is delaying something you should be doing right now. What Grant describes is a way of working. Hereâs the quote where I pick my nit. "When we bemoan the lack of originality in the world, we blame it on the absence of creativity. If only people could generate more novel ideas, weâd all be better off. But in reality, the biggest barrier to originality is not idea generationâ itâs idea selection." Actually, my experience and research say that often the problem occurs between idea generation and idea selection. People generate novel ideas all the time. What sets originals apart is that theyâre good at capturing the ideas that they get. Ideas are like butterflies on the wind. If you donât capture them, theyâre gone in an instant. You have to capture ideas so you have a big pile of ideas to play with. The more you have the more likely you are to have an excellent idea and you increase the number of possible connections between ideas. When I start working on a project, I start capturing ideas as I get them, using my trusty voice recorder. The ideas wind up in a file in no particular order. Over time, the file grows and I start seeing some connections. When Iâm ready to start concentrated work I have a lot of stuff that I can use. Often, I put the key ideas on index cards and move them around until they start to make sense. Or I write a âzero draftâ to get more ideas and find out where I need research or clarification. Sometimes it just doesnât work. I canât see how to turn the ideas into writing. Then I consign them to my writing compost file. See my post, âPost or Compostâ to see how that works. One More Thing Thereâs one more thing you should know. This book is a delight to read. The stories are mostly original and well-told. By original, I mean that theyâre not the stories you see in just about every other business or self-help book. In addition, theyâre supported by solid research, and many times the story thatâs being told is the story of the research itself. This review appeared first on my Three Star Leadership blog. Review: Originals is a highly recommended read for any individual who wishes to internalize and apply innovative thinking - In Originals, Adam Grant coalesces the fluidity of an experienced storyteller with the robustness of an academic research paper to craft an instructional manual for original thinkers. Creative chapter titles with action-focused subtitles highlight key concepts that the reader can collect throughout the book. For example, the chapter title âGoldilocks and the Trojan Horseâ and subtitle âCreating and Maintaining Coalitionsâ preview Grantâs advice that originals who wish to create and maintain coalitions with others should moderate their radicalism (as would Goldilocks), enter established environments under the guise of moderation (concealing their true intentions like the Trojan Horse), and then gradually unleash their radical ideas from within the organization. Grant supports his unique perspectives with social science research from unusual environments. For example, Grant illustrates that intuition only aids in domains in which one is experienced by quoting Erik Daneâs study that experienced handbag owners were 22% more accurate at identifying real handbags in shorter time periods than in longer time periods. Grant illustrates his points using examples from creators such as Salzburgâs Mozart, companies such as Americaâs Warby Parker, activists such as Serbiaâs SrÄa PopoviÄ, and world institutions such as the Nobel Prize, indicating that his insights have widespread relevance. Originalsâ valuable outline of contrarian success principles culminates in a 10-page section following the text entitled âActions for Impact,â which provides 30 action steps categorized by use for individuals, leaders, parents, and teachers. Throughout Originals, Grant elucidates upon the processes and implementation behind individual innovative thinking while suggesting actions to promote an innovation-rich environment. His comments often reveal limitations of conventional thinking and justifications for his suggested actions. For example, Grant indicates that his failure to recognize the value of Warby Parker was a false negative (a false expectation of product failure when the product actually succeeds), leading him to recommend immense idea generation, seeking feedback from oneâs peers, and industry research as action steps due to the broad perspective gained from these activities. Novel ideas discussed by Grant in this book include seeking quantity of insights over quality, challenging the status quo, collaboration as key to innovation, seeking security while waiting for the right time to implement an original idea, and remaining open-minded. Indeed, Originals provides a broad yet tactical guideline for success. Originals is not without its shortcomings. Most of Grantâs examples concern business and politics, limiting most of the bookâs value to professionals in those domains. Similarly, Originals (like many of todayâs popular business books) mainly focuses on American businesses while most of its few non-American examples highlight Europeans in the past 200 years, which eschews numerous centuries of rich examples from Asia, Africa, Oceania, and South America. In numerous chapters, Grant immerses the reader so deeply into anecdotes that he dilutes the impact of the chapterâs main point. Grantâs inconsistent use of graphics and tables throughout the book reduces the clarity of chapters without such supplemental aids. Grant largely supports his points with social science research, which often lack the validity of more rigorous natural science research. The book includes footnotes but lacks a list of supplementary literature for further reading. However, the depth of this book outweighs these downsides. Grant upends the readerâs traditional paradigms concerning âsuccessâ through his accessible and convincing writing. Originals is a highly recommended read for any individual who wishes to internalize and apply innovative thinking principles in any area of life.




| ASIN | B00XIYGCDO |
| Accessibility | Learn more |
| Best Sellers Rank | #66,445 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store ) #54 in Business Motivation & Self-Improvement (Kindle Store) #58 in Motivational Business Management #68 in Popular Psychology Personality Study |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (7,681) |
| Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
| File size | 3.0 MB |
| ISBN-10 | 9780698405776 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0698405776 |
| Language | English |
| Page Flip | Enabled |
| Print length | 349 pages |
| Publication date | February 2, 2016 |
| Publisher | Penguin Books |
| Screen Reader | Supported |
| Word Wise | Enabled |
| X-Ray | Enabled |
W**K
Being Original is a learnable skill -- start with this book
Adam Grant titled his book: Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World, but thatâs not exactly right. Hereâs how he describes what it means to be original in this book. âOriginality itself starts with creativity: generating a concept that is both novel and useful. But it doesnât stop there. Originals are people who take the initiative to make their visions a reality.â The good news is that originality is not a fixed trait. Like many other things in life, you can develop your skills and get better over time. Thatâs what Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World is about. If youâre interested in being more original, or in making a contribution to the world, or in having a more satisfying life, this book will help you. The core of Originals is made up of eight chapters. Creative Destruction: The Risky Business of Going Against the Grain Blind Inventors and One-Eyed Investors: The Art and Science of Recognizing Original Ideas Out On a Limb: Speaking the Truth to Power Fools Rush In: Timing, Strategic Procrastination, and The First Mover Disadvantage Goldilocks and The Trojan Horse: Creating and Maintaining Coalitions Rebel With a Cause: How Siblings, Parents, and Mentors Nurture Originality Rethinking Groupthink: The Myths of Strong Cultures, Cults, and Devilâs Advocates Rocking The Boat and Keeping It Steady: Managing Anxiety, Apathy, Ambivalence, and Anger Thereâs also a section called âActions for Impact.â Itâs an excellent overview of the material in the book with good advice on how to put what youâve read about into practice. Brand New Insights I identified two kinds of insights in the book. The first were, if youâll pardon the expression, âOriginal.â Here are a few. I learned that a sense of security in one realm of life makes us able to take risks in another realm of life. Those risk-taking entrepreneurs arenât risk-takers all the time. Instead, they and we maintain a kind of risk portfolio. That made perfect sense when I read it, but Iâd never thought of things that way before. I found many insights in this book about judging and presenting ideas. Iâve spent most of my adult life as a writer and speaker, but the book produced several âaha!â moments. There are lots of insights on parenting. Theyâre the sort of thing I wish I had known decades ago. Now I plan to pass them on to my children who have children of their own. If youâre in business and looking for the people who can make your business go and grow thereâs lots of good advice for you. Read about the hiring blueprints (professional, star, and commitment) and how they work (or donât) in different situations. Insights that Deepened Understanding There are also lots of insights here that deepened my understanding. Grant describes things that match my experience, but by describing them and analyzing them, he added the âwhyâ to make my experience and understanding richer. Hereâs one example in a quote from the book. âResearch demonstrates that it is the most creative children who are the least likely to become the teacherâs pet.â That was me. I was the kid that was always coming up with a new idea about how to do things, and I most definitely was not my teachersâ pets. After reading Originals I understood the situation better than before. Hereâs another example. Iâve known for years that it wasnât necessarily an advantage to be the first mover in an industry. What Grant added for me was some of the reasons why. A Small Quibble I only have a quibble with one part of the book, and it truly is a quibble, not a major issue. Grant describes how some originals procrastinate creatively. My quibble is that I donât call what he describes âprocrastination.â For me, âprocrastinationâ is delaying something you should be doing right now. What Grant describes is a way of working. Hereâs the quote where I pick my nit. "When we bemoan the lack of originality in the world, we blame it on the absence of creativity. If only people could generate more novel ideas, weâd all be better off. But in reality, the biggest barrier to originality is not idea generationâ itâs idea selection." Actually, my experience and research say that often the problem occurs between idea generation and idea selection. People generate novel ideas all the time. What sets originals apart is that theyâre good at capturing the ideas that they get. Ideas are like butterflies on the wind. If you donât capture them, theyâre gone in an instant. You have to capture ideas so you have a big pile of ideas to play with. The more you have the more likely you are to have an excellent idea and you increase the number of possible connections between ideas. When I start working on a project, I start capturing ideas as I get them, using my trusty voice recorder. The ideas wind up in a file in no particular order. Over time, the file grows and I start seeing some connections. When Iâm ready to start concentrated work I have a lot of stuff that I can use. Often, I put the key ideas on index cards and move them around until they start to make sense. Or I write a âzero draftâ to get more ideas and find out where I need research or clarification. Sometimes it just doesnât work. I canât see how to turn the ideas into writing. Then I consign them to my writing compost file. See my post, âPost or Compostâ to see how that works. One More Thing Thereâs one more thing you should know. This book is a delight to read. The stories are mostly original and well-told. By original, I mean that theyâre not the stories you see in just about every other business or self-help book. In addition, theyâre supported by solid research, and many times the story thatâs being told is the story of the research itself. This review appeared first on my Three Star Leadership blog.
A**I
Originals is a highly recommended read for any individual who wishes to internalize and apply innovative thinking
In Originals, Adam Grant coalesces the fluidity of an experienced storyteller with the robustness of an academic research paper to craft an instructional manual for original thinkers. Creative chapter titles with action-focused subtitles highlight key concepts that the reader can collect throughout the book. For example, the chapter title âGoldilocks and the Trojan Horseâ and subtitle âCreating and Maintaining Coalitionsâ preview Grantâs advice that originals who wish to create and maintain coalitions with others should moderate their radicalism (as would Goldilocks), enter established environments under the guise of moderation (concealing their true intentions like the Trojan Horse), and then gradually unleash their radical ideas from within the organization. Grant supports his unique perspectives with social science research from unusual environments. For example, Grant illustrates that intuition only aids in domains in which one is experienced by quoting Erik Daneâs study that experienced handbag owners were 22% more accurate at identifying real handbags in shorter time periods than in longer time periods. Grant illustrates his points using examples from creators such as Salzburgâs Mozart, companies such as Americaâs Warby Parker, activists such as Serbiaâs SrÄa PopoviÄ, and world institutions such as the Nobel Prize, indicating that his insights have widespread relevance. Originalsâ valuable outline of contrarian success principles culminates in a 10-page section following the text entitled âActions for Impact,â which provides 30 action steps categorized by use for individuals, leaders, parents, and teachers. Throughout Originals, Grant elucidates upon the processes and implementation behind individual innovative thinking while suggesting actions to promote an innovation-rich environment. His comments often reveal limitations of conventional thinking and justifications for his suggested actions. For example, Grant indicates that his failure to recognize the value of Warby Parker was a false negative (a false expectation of product failure when the product actually succeeds), leading him to recommend immense idea generation, seeking feedback from oneâs peers, and industry research as action steps due to the broad perspective gained from these activities. Novel ideas discussed by Grant in this book include seeking quantity of insights over quality, challenging the status quo, collaboration as key to innovation, seeking security while waiting for the right time to implement an original idea, and remaining open-minded. Indeed, Originals provides a broad yet tactical guideline for success. Originals is not without its shortcomings. Most of Grantâs examples concern business and politics, limiting most of the bookâs value to professionals in those domains. Similarly, Originals (like many of todayâs popular business books) mainly focuses on American businesses while most of its few non-American examples highlight Europeans in the past 200 years, which eschews numerous centuries of rich examples from Asia, Africa, Oceania, and South America. In numerous chapters, Grant immerses the reader so deeply into anecdotes that he dilutes the impact of the chapterâs main point. Grantâs inconsistent use of graphics and tables throughout the book reduces the clarity of chapters without such supplemental aids. Grant largely supports his points with social science research, which often lack the validity of more rigorous natural science research. The book includes footnotes but lacks a list of supplementary literature for further reading. However, the depth of this book outweighs these downsides. Grant upends the readerâs traditional paradigms concerning âsuccessâ through his accessible and convincing writing. Originals is a highly recommended read for any individual who wishes to internalize and apply innovative thinking principles in any area of life.
M**S
Ătes-vous plutĂŽt Chrome ou Internet Explorer ? Si vous avez fait lâeffort de tĂ©lĂ©charger Chrome plutĂŽt que de vous contenter de lâexplorateur par dĂ©faut, vous avez une prĂ©disposition pour lâoriginalitĂ© et la capacitĂ© Ă sortir des sentiers battus. Une prĂ©disposition sans doute accentuĂ©e si vous ĂȘtes le dernier nĂ© de votre fratrie : ils ont plus le goĂ»t de risque et la volontĂ© de se distinguer que leurs aĂźnĂ©s ! Dâautres dĂ©couvertes surprenantes vous attendent Ă la lecture de cette Ă©tude psychologique et sociologique des originaux et autres rebelles. Lâauteur utilise de nombreux exemples tirĂ©s de lâentreprise et du monde de lâĂ©ducation. Il montre notamment combien le poids du groupe fait taire les originaux et prive le groupe de solutions crĂ©atives, voire le conduit Ă des Ă©checs cuisants. Lâouvrage est riche dâenseignements sur la prise de risque : les personnalitĂ©s originales se caractĂ©risent par leur facilitĂ© Ă oser. Pour les autres, quelques principes simples permettent de prendre des risques mesurĂ©s et de faire face Ă la peur. ReconnaĂźtre sa peur et se prĂ©parer au pire est finalement plus efficace que de chercher Ă se rassurer. Cet ouvrage bouscule nos idĂ©es reçues et nous incite Ă changer nos comportements, tant au travail quâen famille. Il sâappuie sur des Ă©tudes et des exemples prĂ©cis, tout en Ă©tant passionnant Ă lire !
M**N
I**D
Grant continues to highlighs the characteristics of the business leaders. the book reviews the different aspects of the Non-Conformists behavious and traits. As in his other books, Grant's style of writing makes the journey with the book very enjoyable.
S**Y
This is a very good read, particularly if youâre willing to make use of the wisdom, to take action. I liked the chapter about procrastination, it made me consider the benefits of procrastination. Iâll no longer see procrastination as something negative, but something that can actually be beneficial to the development of innovation and ideation.
A**S
.. and full of interesting hints also outside originality
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