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Design Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Designing Your Life

Designing Your Life: How to Build a Well-Lived, Joyful Life by Bill Burnett and Dave Evans. Bill Burnett is the Executive Director of the Design Program at Stanford. He has a BS and MS in product design and has designed numerous products throughout his career. In addition, Dave Evans currently works at the Design Program at Stanford. At a young age Dave worked at Apple where he helped design and market their first mouse. He then joined Electronic Arts as the first VP of Talent.

Above all, this is one of the best books that I have read recently. This is a very insightful. It’s easy to understand why the course taught by Bill and Dave is the most popular course on campus.

There is a simple humanity by having the authors open up about their childhood dreams. Above all, Dave’s dream to be the next Jacques Cousteau, reminds us of initial childhood views of what we wanted to do in life.

In addition, while you may think at first this is just for young kids — think again. Our new covid-19 pandemic has forced millions out of work. This impacts all ages from every walk of life. During this pandemic everyone can benefit from the lessons of designing your health, work, play and love. A quick hint to find job happiness, the trend is to search local job ads.

Bill and Dave strive for us to find holistic happiness in our lives and regarding employment learning how to find the right fit helps you focus better in finding work happiness during such uncertain times.

The focus for their design initially is to understand who you are, what you believe and what you are doing. Easy to see why this is so appealing to students. Bill and Dave brand a Lifeview Reflection. And to no surprise they have discovered many students major in studies defined by their parents – not themselves. They did not provide a percent but clearly the overall number of students who change majors in college start out guided by others’ demands of their future only to realize they are not living their life. This is illustrated in chapter three, Wayfinding.

Similarly, the focus of chapter four Getting Unstuck, will directly appeal to anyone impacted by the covid-19 recession. The one key from Designing Your Lives (chapter five) is taking a chance at resetting your life’s goals. A student was awarded three internships that he really wanted….but how do you accept more than one? Dave and Bill show the way to get the most out of life and show any prospective employer your true character.

Categories
Design Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Scaling Up Excellence

Scaling Up Excellence: Getting to More Without Settling for Less by Stanford professors Robert Sutton and Huggy Rao. This book is a wonderful, insightful read for today’s world. Robert Sutton continues to provide deep analysis for successful leaders. Those leaders in turn generate (and sustain) ideal performers. Coronavirus is challenging business to fundamentally re-think their core business model.

scaling up excellence

Scaling Up Excellence will help organizations understand how to embrace change faster and effectively in the short term. And short term as of mid April may be forecasting this into December 2020.

Let me begin with a new twist for business projects. Conduct a pre-mortem. Organizations conduct post mortems to discover where tasks failed. Sutton’s pre-mortem can drive project goals or reveal scope creep.

The key is dividing your team into two. One team will imagine project delivery as a success specifically down to the details. The second team takes the opposite road, also in great detail. Bring your teams back together and place all points on a whiteboard. Find your hits and misses in a new way and determine if your scope is accurate enough to deliver.

Scaling Up Excellence provides great case studies and academic research. From start-ups, pharmaceuticals, airlines, retail, financial services, education, non-profits, and healthcare. All benefit from pre-mortems.

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Education Globalization Internet2 Network Technology

Laptop orchestra to Beijing via Internet2


Stanford’s Laptop Orchestra will perform via Internet2 to Beijing, over 6,000 miles away via HD video and audio in a performance marking the annual Pan-Asian Music Festival in Palo Alto on Tuesday May 5th.

Tags: Internet2, laptop, orchestra, community, globalization, trends

Categories
Education Globalization Innovation Reading Technology

Latest read: Made to Stick

What book would be a perfect follow up to The Tipping Point and Blink by Malcolm Gladwell? To prove timing is everything I read Dan and Chip Heath’s new release: Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die. The book’s authors acknowledge that their book complements Gladwell’s The Tipping Point by identifying “traits” necessary to make your ideas ‘sticky’ with your intended audience.
Made to StickWritten by brothers Chip and Dan Heath they share experiences and research in finding ideas that stick. Chip is professor of Stanford’s Graduate School of Business. Dan is a consultant to Duke University’s Corporate Education program.

Made to Stick provides wonderful insight to learn how powerful ideas succeed in the face of big obstacles (and people) especially in a stale environment. Take Subway’s series of commercials featuring Jared for example.

Originally passed by PR firms, Jared’s story was brought to life by the Subway store manager where Jared ate while attending Indiana University. The ad campaign was eventually created pro-bono by a firm thinking they would fail. Even Subway’s PR firm did not support this idea. Chip and Dan prove not only how wrong they were, but how powerful the idea has turned out to be for Subway.