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Sign Up for Berkun’s Best Posts If you sign up to receive his best posts via email, you’ll get a FREE copy of a preview edition of Mindfire plus free chapters from all of his bestselling books. Over 19,000 people have signed up. Newsletter Signup Privacy policy enforced by my Rotweiller. 35 Responses to “Should managers know how to code?” Love the point about helping “facilitate” by asking clarify
Sign Up for Berkun’s Best Posts If you sign up to receive his best posts via email, you’ll get a FREE copy of a preview edition of Mindfire plus free chapters from all of his bestselling books. Over 19,000 people have signed up. Newsletter Signup Privacy policy enforced by my Rotweiller. 561 Responses to “Asshole-driven development” I never saw any of the infamous: 1. DNFL (Drunk Now – Fix Later)
Scott Berkun is the bestselling author of eight books on design, innovation, remote work, and more. You can hire him to speak, ask him a question or follow him via email, Twitter and Facebook. 4_5 Stars 5 Stars 4_5 Stars 4_5 Stars 4_5 Stars How Design Makes The World “Berkun shows the true impact of design on the world and makes it fun to discover a new way to think and see” – Matthew Leacock, Cre
Sign Up for Berkun’s Best Posts If you sign up to receive his best posts via email, you’ll get a FREE copy of a preview edition of Mindfire plus free chapters from all of his bestselling books. Over 19,000 people have signed up. Newsletter Signup Privacy policy enforced by my Rotweiller. 17 Responses to “Idea helpers: ways to grow ideas” Talk to Fred, our second smartest guy, and see what he think
In the creative thinking course I taught at the University of Washington, we spent time listing idea killers, statements often heard in organizations that prevent change. Chapter 4 of The Myths of Innovation explores them in detail since it’s essential any creative person familiarize themselves with these phrases and learn countermeasures to overcome them. If you work with ideas, you will hear the
By Scott Berkun, November 2000 Even the brightest people make mistakes. And over the course of a project small assumptions and poor decisions accumulate. Smart teams invest time to discover their bad assumptions early by using a technique called UI prototyping. Combined with usability studies, prototypes keep teams headed in the right direction. Why Prototype? Prototyping is a means of exploring i
Many years ago this was the front page of my website – this now serves as an ancient archive. #60 – How to be a free thinker – Freedom, that ever elusive idea. I do my best to trap some of it here. #59 – How to pick a president – We don’t get to pick our head honcho very often. Here’s advice, from history, on how to do it well. #58 – How to innovate right now – If you want to start right now, read
Sign Up for Berkun’s Best Posts If you sign up to receive his best posts via email, you’ll get a FREE copy of a preview edition of Mindfire plus free chapters from all of his bestselling books. Over 19,000 people have signed up. Newsletter Signup Privacy policy enforced by my Rotweiller. 277 Responses to “Why Smart People Defend Bad Ideas” I think it is relatively simple why smart people defend ba
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