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Medici Effect: What Elephants and Epidemics Can Teach Us About Innovation,   ISBN:9781422102824

     
  Medici Effect: What Elephants and Epidemics Can Teach Us About Innovation

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Binding: Paperback
Release Date: October 2006
Edition: First Trade Paper Edition
List Price: $16.00

Average Customer Rating:
Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5

ISBN-13: 9781422102824
ISBN-10: 1422102823
Author: Frans Johansson
Publisher: Harvard Business Press
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Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:

Why do so many world-changing insights come from people with little or no related experience? Charles Darwin was a geologist when he proposed the theory of evolution. And it was an astronomer who finally explained what happened to the dinosaurs.

Frans Johansson’s The Medici Effect shows how breakthrough ideas most often occur when we bring concepts from one field into a new, unfamiliar territory, and offers examples how we can turn the ideas we discover into path-breaking innovations.

Customer Reviews:

Average Customer Rating: Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5

Disruptive Book
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

Fantastic book by Frans Johansson. The Medici Effect shows a different approach to innovation and creative thought. When we bring together people from different origins, cultures and backgrounds the possibility to get a creative boom increases. Teams with a unified culture, similar profiles and opinions might suffer with the lack of the creative sparkle.
There are very interesting examples of how this mix of cultures, thoughts and ideas resulted in disruptive innovations and successful products/services. Read it!

WOW - Love the examples on the book
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

I could not put the book down. It was stimulating. I have had so many discussions with other people about this book and the examples in it. I simply LOVED it

A new way to look at innovation (pardon the pun)
Customer Rating:  Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3 Score = 3

This book is about the nature of innovation and how to achieve phenomenal breakthroughs. The author draws parallels to the Medici family who enabled the Renaissance period inventors such as Da Vinci. I won't go much into the specifics so as not to steal the thunder. The book's main idea revolves around a creative angle of looking at innovation and what's necessary to foster it.
The book is a nice read, but the discourse-like nature of the later chapters can wear out the unprepared reader.

The Medici Effect works, but are corporations brave enough to implement it?
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

Frans Johansson has taken on an interesting, albeit potentially fruitless task. Johansson teaches in his book The Medici Effect, how people and corporations can embrace and encourage innovation from among their ranks. The only problem is - very few corporations will ever implement the necessary changes.

Don't get me wrong - the book is brilliant. One example: Johannson talks about the concept of risk homeostasis. Don't let the term intimidate you; the concept is simple and brilliant: people are hard-wired to allow for a certain amount of risk in any given situation. If the situation itself is dangerous, they will approach it with care, but if the situation is relatively benign, then they'll be more careless.

For example, when your local department of transportation spends millions of dollars to make a road or highway safer, the end result is NOT fewer crashes - because people drive on those safer roads MORE recklessly (to meet their hard-wired allowable amount of risk).

Another example: child-proof lids to medication have actually been found to INCREASE the number of poisoning among children. Why? Parents are more careless about leaving medicine around their kids, now that it has a child-proof cap.

The entire book is very well thought out and researched, and chock full of examples to follow so that individuals can get a better sense of how to really create groundbreaking innovation. He talks about working 'at the intersection' of two different fields, then using the combination of skills and concepts within those fields to generate truly innovative ideas.

I found the thing very helpful personally, as it speaks to the kind of mindset that generative and creative PEOPLE need to cultivate in order to become innovative and creative individuals...but the idea of foisting these concepts onto an organization is just downright silly.

Perhaps whether these corporations actually implement the ideas isn't really the point; the point is to be available for expensive speaking engagements, and to realize your clients will FEEL more innovative, without genuinely applying these ideas. If a company is to truly foster innovation among the ranks of all its employees, further ideas should be considered.
* Companies should regularly host gatherings where staff members from different divisions congregate to come up with new ideas, and those ideas should receive genuine feedback.
* Focusing on low-hanging fruit (really easy-to-implement ideas) is a cop-out for taking on the work of real innovation.
* Innovation should be encouraged and mentored within different parts of the company...and mandatory implementation of ideas should occur.
* A regular meeting where a tiny portion of the budget is allocated to implement an idea every quarter should happen, and people from all segments of the company should be encouraged to participate. The money MUST be spent in that quarter, mandating action from senior executives as well as input from staff.
* The implementation of innovation must be the sole focus of one person or group, and their evaluation must include metrics for the QUANTITY of ideas followed up on (instead of on the number of successes, removing the focus on from how polished an idea is to the sheer brute-force mindset of quantity of ideas).
* The economy continues to falter in the US, and companies are looking for places to balance their expenses. Cutting of R&D and innovation are the first places to look - especially at large, publicly-traded, quarter-to-quarter focused enterprises. Companies that fall into that trap will become cautionary tales for the coming generation of business leaders.
The Medici Effect will give you a lot to think about, both in terms of its potential effect on the corporate sphere and in your personal evolution. Johansson has succeeded in compiling an amazingly insightful book - but I wonder if he gets discouraged by all the lovely feedback he gets from corporations, only to see them follow the same directional line of development they always have. For his sake, I hope he views a successful speaking engagement is a victory in itself - or else he may become a very discouraged man.

Rewarding and Inspiring
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

This is an excellent and well-researched book on creativity and innovation, and how they can be fostered in individuals and organizations by facilitating "intersection" of diverse disciplines, cultures, life experiences, worldviews, etc. The intersection concept is similar to concepts such as fusion, multidisciplinarity, interdisciplinarity, cross-fertilization, liberal arts education, integrative approaches (eg, in medicine), etc.

The book is well organized and well written, with a diverse range of fascinating examples to illustrate the concepts, and therefore the book is easy and enjoyable to read.

To be sure, the book and the concept have some limitations, as other reviewers have pointed out. In particular, (a) Johansson has not provided every "how to" detail related to implementing the concepts, (b) intersection won't always work, especially if subtleties in its implementation are missed, and indeed (c) there are some circumstances where constraints make creativity and innovation essentially impossible and sometimes even undesirable, with standard solutions being more appropriate instead.

But this is a book which should be judged by what it offers, not by what it lacks, and it certainly offers a lot of valuable insights on a fundamentally important topic.

Highly recommended for people seeking to be creative and innovative, for parents thinking about their children's education and careers, and for those with a general interest in education and personal development. This book has certainly inspired me to try harder to seek intersectional ways to make use of my own diverse background and interests.

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