
Smartcuts
How Hackers, Innovators, and Icons Accelerate Success
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Narrated by:
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Shane Snow
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Erik Bergmann
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By:
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Shane Snow
About this listen
Entrepreneur and journalist Shane Snow (Wired, Fast Company, The New Yorker, and cofounder of Contently) analyzes the lives of people and companies that do incredible things in implausibly short time.
How do some startups go from zero to billions in mere months? How did Alexander the Great, YouTube tycoon Michelle Phan, and Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon climb to the top in less time than it takes most of us to get a promotion? What do high-growth businesses, world-class heart surgeons, and underdog marketers do in common to beat the norm?
One way or another, they do it like computer hackers. They employ what psychologists call "lateral thinking: To rethink convention and break "rules" that aren't rules.
These are not shortcuts, which produce often dubious short-term gains, but ethical "smartcuts" that eliminate unnecessary effort and yield sustainable momentum. In Smartcuts, Snow shatters common wisdom about success, revealing how conventions like "paying dues" prevent progress, why kids shouldn't learn times tables, and how, paradoxically, it's easier to build a huge business than a small one.
From SpaceX to The Cuban Revolution, from Ferrari to Skrillex, Smartcuts is a narrative adventure that busts old myths about success and shows how innovators and icons do the incredible by working smarter - and how perhaps the rest of us can, too.
©2014 Shane Snow (P)2014 HarperCollins PublishersNice Story
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What made the experience of listening to Smartcuts the most enjoyable?
Real life examples from a variety of people - surfers to presidents - make the book very enjoyable!Good examples taken of real life short cuts!
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very good.
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Great read
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If this book wasn’t for you, who do you think might enjoy it more?
Someone who has not read about the subject.What could Shane Snow have done to make this a more enjoyable book for you?
Propose new ideas.You didn’t love this book--but did it have any redeeming qualities?
The book can easily be written in 6 pages without loosing any important information.A bit of common sense and a lot of plagiarism
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The reading style was fine (even at speed x 3)
The content was frankly too weak, too convenient, for my liking.
I understand the theory and applicability of 'smart cuts'.
The stories unto themselves were great but trying to pull it all together into 9 fundamentals of **applicable** smart cuts was where I found myself somewhat wryly thinking, "Really?!"..
I even wrote down the nine points, to study them more closely ; was I missing something?
Maybe I was, maybe I did.. Maybe that failing was more mine than the books but either which way, the simple fact is that I felt disappointed with SmartCuts.
Drat.
Disappointing
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