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The Innovator's Cookbook

Essentials for Inventing What Is Next

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the New York Times bestselling author of How We Got To Now and Farsighted
Steven Johnson, author of Where Good Ideas Come From, Emergence, Everything Bad is Good for You, Mind Wide Open and Ghost Map, and an acknowledged bestselling leader on the subject of innovation, gathers - for a foundational text on the subject of innovation - essays, interviews, and cutting-edge insights by such exciting field leaders as Peter Drucker, Richard Florida, Eric Von Hippel, Dean Keith Simonton, Arthur Koestler, John Seely Brown, and Marshall Berman. Johnson also provides new material from Marisa Mayer of Google, Twitter's Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey, and Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's former Chief Software Architect. With additional commentary by Johnson himself, this book reveals the innovation found in a wide range of fields, including science, technology, energy, transportation, education, art, and sociology, making it vital, fresh, and fascinating reading for our time, and for the future.
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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2011
      Johnson (Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation, 2010, etc.) offers an invaluable compendium of the best available thinking on innovation. "The history of human progress, worldwide, is the history of new ideas put to wonderful new use," writes the author. In recent years, scholars and innovators have studied the mystery of innovation, including the more than a dozen gurus from diverse fields represented here. In essays, studies and interviews, the contributors describe the factors and conditions that often spark creativity. Stressing innovation's place at the heart of entrepreneurship, Peter Drucker reflects on innovation opportunities. Within companies they occur because of unexpected occurrences, incongruities, process needs or market changes; outside companies, they arise through demographic changes, changes in perception and new knowledge. "Above all, innovation is work--rather than genius," he writes. Richard Florida offers a concise summary of his creative-class thesis, arguing for the mix of lifestyle, diversity and other factors that shape a creative environment. Other contributors address such topics as the variables affecting success in innovation, how business imperatives can kill creativity, the role of consumers and the growth of social innovations from neighborhood watch groups to Wikipedia. Musician-producer Brian Eno, who notes that new technologies often precede new realizations of their use, says he often fiddles around with newly invented tools. He also travels to escape normal everyday life. Tom Kelley, general manager of design firm IDEO, stresses the importance of cross-pollination across fields and the strategic role space can play in a team's creativity. With an introduction by Johnson on the critical importance of innovation for America's economic future, this is a welcome tool kit for anyone looking to cook up new ideas.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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  • English

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