The Pecking Order
A thoughtful creativity professor sent me this image, and added ‘e.e.cummings wrote a poem called“the song of olaf”…in which he provides wonderful advice for dealing
A thoughtful creativity professor sent me this image, and added ‘e.e.cummings wrote a poem called“the song of olaf”…in which he provides wonderful advice for dealing
The new Stanford d.school, or as it is known officially, The Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford, has been lucky to attract enormously skilled
Adrian Savage over at Slow Leadership has a an insightful new post based on his reading of advanced copy of The No Asshole Rule. I
As I wrote in my earlier post about about Joi Ito, I am fascinated about the prospect of using online worlds as arenas to develop
As I’ve written about before, Diego Rodriguez and I taught a class at the Stanford d.school last spring on Creating Infectious Action. One of the
We had some lively conversation a few weeks ago about why I call them assholes, and although most folks preferred the use of that mild
One of the main ideas that runs through The No Asshole Rule, and in fact, much of the work that we do at Stanford’s Center
The No Asshole Rule has been getting some nice advanced buzz, in large part, because of the nice things that a number of bloggers have
I was delighted to see that Jack and Suzy Welch’s new column in BusinessWeek, "Send the Jerks Packing," is singing my tune. In response to
David Maister was kind enough to write some nice words about The No Asshole Rule on his blog after reading an advance copy. As skilled
As I mentioned in an earlier post, we had conference earlier this week at Stanford this week on sustainability, which was hosted by our d.school
I made the mistake of opening the Amazon box yesterday. It contained Bill Moggridge’s brand new 766 page book Designing Interactions. I have several talks