Tag: technology
All content tagged with "technology".
Articles
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The People You Work With Shape Everything
Why the people you work with early in your career become the foundation for long-term success. Real insights from 20 years in tech.
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Why Media Companies Fail
The seven self-inflicted wounds that explain why traditional media companies struggle with digital transformation.
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The Seven Deadly Sins of Media
Most media companies aren't failing because of external forces. They're accelerating their own demise through seven self-inflicted wounds.
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The Portal Closed Behind Them
Media executives are optimizing homepages while their audiences live in feeds, chats, and AI interfaces. The divergence is complete—and irreversible.
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The Portal Problem
Why media analytics show 30 seconds on homepages but three hours on TikTok—and what it means for the future of journalism.
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Audience 3.0: The Great Divergence
How the relationship between publishers and their audiences is fundamentally transforming, and what it means for the future of media.
Book Reviews
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Accelerate: Review and Key Takeaways
A data-driven exploration of software delivery performance, "Accelerate" reveals how high-performing technology teams can drive significant business outcomes through four key metrics: deployment frequency, lead time, mean time to recovery, and change failure rate. By presenting rigorous research connecting technical practices with organizational success, the book provides leaders with a strategic framework for understanding and improving software development capabilities, emphasizing the importance of both technical excellence and organizational culture.
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The Tipping Point: Review and Key Takeaways
A groundbreaking exploration of how small changes can create significant social transformations, "The Tipping Point" examines the precise moments when ideas, trends, and behaviors suddenly and dramatically spread through society. Gladwell introduces three key principles—the Law of the Few, the Stickiness Factor, and the Power of Context—to explain how seemingly minor shifts can trigger massive, unpredictable social epidemics across diverse domains like crime, marketing, and social movements.
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The World Is Flat 3.0: Review and Key Takeaways
In "The World Is Flat 3.0", Thomas L. Friedman explores how technology, outsourcing, and global connectivity have fundamentally transformed the economic landscape, creating unprecedented opportunities for collaboration and competition across borders. The book argues that ten key forces have "flattened" the world, enabling individuals and organizations to innovate and compete globally regardless of geographic location, with success dependent on continuous learning, adaptability, and cross-cultural collaboration.
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Inspired: Review and Key Takeaways
Learn to design, build, and scale products consumers can’t get enough of How do today’s most successful tech companies―Amazon, Google, Facebook, Netflix, Tesla―design, develop, and deploy the products that have earned the love of literally billions of people around the world? Perhaps surprisingly, they do it very differently than most tech companies. In INSPIRED, technology product management thought leader Marty Cagan provides readers with a master class in how to structure and staff a vibrant and successful product organization, and how to discover and deliver technology products that your customers will love―and that will work for your business. With sections on assembling the right people and skillsets, discovering the right product, embracing an effective yet lightweight process, and creating a strong product culture, readers can take the information they learn and immediately leverage it within their own organizations―dramatically improving their own product efforts. Whether you’re an early-stage startup working to get to product/market fit, or a growth-stage company working to scale your product organization, or a large, long-established company trying to regain your ability to consistently deliver new value for your customers, INSPIRED will take you and your product organization to a new level of customer engagement, consistent innovation, and business success. Filled with the author’s own personal stories―and profiles of some of today’s most-successful product managers and technology-powered product companies, including Adobe, Apple, BBC, Google, Microsoft, and Netflix―INSPIRED will show you how to turn up the dial of your own product efforts, creating technology products your customers love. The first edition of INSPIRED, published ten years ago, established itself as the primary reference for technology product managers, and can be found on the shelves of nearly every successful technology product company worldwide. This thoroughly updated second edition shares the same objective of being the most valuable resource for technology product managers, yet it is completely new―sharing the latest practices and techniques of today’s most-successful tech product companies, and the men and women behind every great product.
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The Innovator's Dilemma: Review and Key Takeaways
Clayton Christensen's groundbreaking work explores why successful companies often fail, not through poor management, but by making rational decisions that prioritize existing customers and high-margin products. The book introduces the concept of disruptive innovation, revealing how seemingly inferior technologies can eventually overtake established markets by serving overlooked segments with simpler, cheaper solutions, challenging traditional strategic thinking about technological advancement and market competition.
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Co-Intelligence: Review and Key Takeaways
AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER From Wharton professor and author of the popular One Useful Thing Substack newsletter Ethan Mollick comes the definitive playbook for working, learning, and living in the new age of AI Something new entered our world in November 2022 — the first general purpose AI that could pass for a human and do the kinds of creative, innovative work that only humans could do previously. Wharton professor Ethan Mollick immediately understood what ChatGPT meant: after millions of years on our own, humans had developed a kind of co-intelligence that could augment, or even replace, human thinking. Through his writing, speaking, and teaching, Mollick has become one of the most prominent and provocative explainers of AI, focusing on the practical aspects of how these new tools for thought can transform our world. In Co-Intelligence, Mollick urges us to engage with AI as co-worker, co-teacher, and coach. He assesses its profound impact on business and education, using dozens of real-time examples of AI in action. Co-Intelligence shows what it means to think and work together with smart machines, and why it's imperative that we master that skill. Mollick challenges us to utilize AI's enormous power without losing our identity, to learn from it without being misled, and to harness its gifts to create a better human future. Wide ranging, hugely thought-provoking, optimistic, and lucid, Co-Intelligence reveals the promise and power of this new era.