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Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Principles

Principles by Ray Dalio is an interesting read. With no prior knowledge of Ray’s life, his story is easily inspirational. Ray founded Bridgewater Associates in 1975. He is straightforward about the difficulties encounter at the beginning the company.

principals by ray dalio

In other words, I enjoyed learning of his early life. He addresses his career in part one: “Where I’m coming from” begins in 1947 and carries Ray’s life to 2017.

Looking back after running Bridgewater for so many years afforded him a series of behaviors that helped drive his success. At the same time he does address difficult decisions that resulted in layoffs when his business was struggling.

Similarly, his key advice drawing on his long experience is to rely upon hard data (or evidence) to make smart decisions. On the other hand opinion based decisions are difficult and require those with an established history.

Above all, Ray discusses over and over: “Idea Meritocracy = Radical Truth + Radical Transparency + Believability-Weighted Decision Making.”

However there are quite a lot of ideas to absorb. For many including myself the book becomes very detailed. Furthermore, Ray indicates the behaviors he has identified may take over 18 months of focus to see results.

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Education Innovation Reading Technology

Latest Read: Atomic Habits

Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones by James Clear. What a surprising and enjoyable read. James starts with a rather tragic event in his life and the steps he took to succeed. This places a good foundation to establishing a framework to form good habits and break the bad ones.

atomic habits

Right away James provides good documentation for the reader to achieve the steps necessary to be successful. He leverages a successful experience in college baseball as the base (pun intended) to reveal insights to establish good habits.

Seeing a reference to Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow research felt good to see again on display for us to leverage.

Establishing a habit seems simple, but why do so many of us fail? Life gets in the way. Yet some are too oversimplified.

For example reading a book one page a day. Really? Okay…drop the TV remote and read for 20 minutes – not just one page. Reading one page a day is not really making a concerted effort. So this habit plan could use a tweak.

As a matter of fact, Atomic Habits does move us in the direction towards concerted efforts. This may be somewhat harder to establish (a new brand) around concerted effort vs. atomic habit. You must know your audience.

Atomic Habits in a round about way addresses how technology in fact makes it easy to fail at establishing new habits. James provides good insights about human behavior and technology.