The Innovation Delusion
How Our Obsession with the New Has Disrupted the Work That Matters Most
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Narrated by:
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Rob Shapiro
About this listen
“The most important book I’ve read in a long time . . . It explains so much about what is wrong with our technology, our economy, and the world, and gives a simple recipe for how to fix it: Focus on understanding what it takes for your products and services to last.”—Tim O’Reilly, founder of O’Reilly Media
It’s hard to avoid innovation these days. Nearly every product gets marketed as being disruptive, whether it’s genuinely a new invention or just a new toothbrush. But in this manifesto on thestate of American work, historians of technology Lee Vinsel and Andrew L. Russell argue that our way of thinking about and pursuing innovation has made us poorer, less safe, and—ironically—less innovative.
Drawing on years of original research and reporting, The Innovation Delusion shows how the ideology of change for its own sake has proved a disaster. Corporations have spent millions hiring chief innovation officers while their core businesses tank. Computer science programs have drilled their students on programming and design, even though theoverwhelming majority of jobs are in IT and maintenance. In countless cities, suburban sprawl has left local governments with loads of deferred repairs that they can’t afford to fix. And sometimes innovation even kills—like in 2018 when a Miami bridge hailed for its innovative design collapsed onto a highway and killed six people.
In this provocative, deeply researched book, Vinsel and Russell tell the story of how we devalued the work that underpins modern life—and, in doing so, wrecked our economy and public infrastructure while lining the pockets of consultants who combine the ego of Silicon Valley with the worst of Wall Street’s greed. The authors offer a compelling plan for how we can shift our focus away from the pursuit of growth at all costs, and back toward neglected activities like maintenance, care, and upkeep.
For anyone concerned by the crumbling state of our roads and bridges or the direction our economy is headed, The Innovation Delusion is a deeply necessary reevaluation of a trend we can still disrupt.
Some of the authors' arguments are more attainable than others. I am not sure we live in a world where janitors are recognised and remunerated at the same level as originators of things. Whether or not that is fair is for each reader to decide.
The book was well narrated too.
The antidote to fail fast and fail often
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I need to reflect more about how to plan and incorporate more maintenance work into my life. We need to do the work! How do I learn to enjoy this?
Heartfelt & refreshing
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Mis-Titled
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“We don’t value maintenance jobs enough and Rate thinking jobs higher in an unfair manner.”. While there surely is some truth to that notion making this point over and over with raisin picked examples and at many time incoherent argument get tedious very quickly. Didn’t make it to the end.
Repetitive and boring
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