Keep It Simple, Stupid: Rock and Roll All Night (and Refine Every Day)
99 Problems: Good Enough Isn’t Great: It’s easy to coast when you have success
The Inverted Pyramid: The Principle that Explains Why it Can Be Good to Think Upside Down
99 Problems: Beyond Keeping the Lights On - How Smart Leaders Balance Today's Urgencies with Tomorrow's Vision
The Magic of Affordance: A Design Principle Less Ordinary than it Affords
99 Problems: I’m going to stop planning for the future like it’s some distant horizon. Here’s how
The Golden Ratio: Where Art Meets Precision and Nature Reveals Its Blueprint
99 Problems: How Do You Reignite Innovation in Your Team?
Anthropomorphism: Why Do We Give Feelings To Machines?
Why do we see faces in clouds, cars with expressions, or even attribute human emotions to our household appliances (admit it, your Henry Hoover has feelings)? The answer lies in the ancient concept of anthropomorphism—a principle as old as humanity itself, born from our inherent need to understand and relate to the world around us by projecting our own characteristics onto it.
Hick's Law: The Overwhelming Choice of Dilemma
99 Problems: Chasing the Market
The Scaling Fallacy: A Tricky Little Concept
Performance Load: The Art of Less
99 Problems: Why Short-Term Gains Are the Silent Killers of Your Future Success—and How to Fix It
Constraint: Creativity's Secret Weapon
99 Problems: Overcoming Burnout
Signal to Noise: Navigating the Creative Cosmos
In the chaotic symphony of modern life, where every ping and notification competes for our limited attention, the concept of ‘signal to noise’ has never been more relevant. But before it became the buzzword of the digital age, it had its origins in the dry and dusty world of early telecommunications.