Making Decisions: Putting the Human Back in the Machine cover art

Making Decisions: Putting the Human Back in the Machine

Putting the Human Back in the Machine

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Making Decisions: Putting the Human Back in the Machine

By: Ed Smith
Narrated by: David Thorpe
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About this listen

Winning takes many forms. For fans of Matthew Syed, this is a great sports book about leadership, judgement and decision-making – rooted in the theory that helped Ed Smith lead England cricket to sustained success. And to help us all win more.

‘An absolutely fascinating book’ THE GAME, The Times football pod
  • How do you spot the opportunities that others miss?
  • How do you turn a team’s performance around?
  • How do you make good decisions amid a tidal wave of information? And how can you improve?

As chief selector for the England cricket team, Ed Smith pioneered new methods for building successful teams and watched his decisions tested in real time on the pitch. During his three-year tenure, England averaged 7 wins in every 10 completed matches, better than they have performed before or since.

Making Decisions reveals Smith’s unique approach to finding success in a fast-changing and increasingly data-reliant world. The best decisions, Smith argues, rely on a combination of differing kinds of intelligence: from algorithms to intuition. This is a truth that the most successful people know: data cannot account for everything, it must be harnessed with human insight. Whatever the power of data, humans aren’t finished yet.

Sharing for the first time the tools he introduced as England selector, Smith’s book captures the immediacy of life at the sharp end, while also exploring frameworks from the top levels of sports, business and the arts. Decision-making is revealed as a creative enterprise, not a reductive system.

Making Decisions offers an invaluable guide for those who want a better framework for developing, explaining and implementing new ideas.

Career Success Cricket Decision-Making & Problem Solving Personal Development Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Sports Stress Management Career England Success Business

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All stars
Most relevant
Massively increased by respect for Ed Smith as a selector, in understanding how thorough his processes were even if I didn't always agree with his outcomes!

Excellent read

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decent enough read- more of Ed Smith doing a case study of himself rather than explicitly factual, which is good but not what I was expecting. Goes very in depth in most areas with potential misses over properly analysing mistakes. Keeping player anonymity (I.e Ed not wanting to say "we picked such and such but he was rubbish") definitely stops the book fully exploring mistakes and biases.

Still an interesting listen for cricket fans that will teach you about how decisions are made, why they're made that way, and why "they should obviously just do X" is normally wrong or at least more nuanced than you'd think.

The book is good for what it is: Ed Smith talking about his opinions on decision making based on his experiences. It's somewhat autobiographical and opinionated (mostly with evidence) so is still interesting and useful: but it's more a case study than a general guide on decision making.

Narration is very good, has tone changes to stop it being monotonous- I often forget the narrator is reading someone else's work as it sounds that natural to him.

more personal than expected but still useful and insightful

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What a book!

Great insight into fields of complexity and how to structure decision making whilst accounting for the nature of humans.

Has many parallels with other fields and is a wider study that the equally brilliant thinking in bets by Annie dukes.

A great book about applied decision making

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A hugely fascinating study in leadership and decision-making, through the lens of elite sport.

Outstanding

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Good explanation of decision making in sport. Good read for cricket fans. Interesting and well performed.

Sports Decisions

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