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Beschreibung
Companies spend billions installing frameworks into operating systems that were never designed to run them. The language changes. The behavior doesn't.

Ever been told to be "data driven" for a decision already made?

Sat in a meeting about having too many meetings and scheduled another?

Been given a strategy that can't fail because no one defined success?

Those aren't bugs. They're features of a system doing exactly what it was designed to do.

I Think, Therefore I Know isn't another playbook. It diagnoses why organizations resist the changes they claim to want and what it actually takes to stop repeating the cycle.

Drawing on neuroscience, economics, manufacturing history, and two decades of experience across factory floors, software teams, and corporate boardrooms, Brad Nelson explores how incentive structures, measurement dysfunction, and unchecked growth produce organizations that optimize for activity over value, then punish the people who notice.

Inside, you'll explore:
Why roughly 80 percent of software features go unused and what that reveals about how organizations decide what to build
How shareholder primacy reshaped corporate behavior and why the system struggles to justify its own outcomes
The biological effects of stress on cognition and performance and why "work harder" is often ineffective leadership advice
What companies like Toyota and Costco, and leaders like Alan Mulally at Ford, understood about building resilient systems
A practical confidence framework for matching validation effort to uncertainty and risk
Why copying "best practices" fails and how effective organizations adapt principles instead of imitating tactics

This is not a book about what organizations should do. It's an examination of what they actually do and the gap between the two.

Written for leaders, practitioners, and anyone who has watched smart people build the wrong things for the right-sounding reasons.

"Belief doesn't lead to change. Behavior does."
Companies spend billions installing frameworks into operating systems that were never designed to run them. The language changes. The behavior doesn't.

Ever been told to be "data driven" for a decision already made?

Sat in a meeting about having too many meetings and scheduled another?

Been given a strategy that can't fail because no one defined success?

Those aren't bugs. They're features of a system doing exactly what it was designed to do.

I Think, Therefore I Know isn't another playbook. It diagnoses why organizations resist the changes they claim to want and what it actually takes to stop repeating the cycle.

Drawing on neuroscience, economics, manufacturing history, and two decades of experience across factory floors, software teams, and corporate boardrooms, Brad Nelson explores how incentive structures, measurement dysfunction, and unchecked growth produce organizations that optimize for activity over value, then punish the people who notice.

Inside, you'll explore:
Why roughly 80 percent of software features go unused and what that reveals about how organizations decide what to build
How shareholder primacy reshaped corporate behavior and why the system struggles to justify its own outcomes
The biological effects of stress on cognition and performance and why "work harder" is often ineffective leadership advice
What companies like Toyota and Costco, and leaders like Alan Mulally at Ford, understood about building resilient systems
A practical confidence framework for matching validation effort to uncertainty and risk
Why copying "best practices" fails and how effective organizations adapt principles instead of imitating tactics

This is not a book about what organizations should do. It's an examination of what they actually do and the gap between the two.

Written for leaders, practitioners, and anyone who has watched smart people build the wrong things for the right-sounding reasons.

"Belief doesn't lead to change. Behavior does."
Über den Autor
Brad Nelson is the author of I Think, Therefore I Know: Scientific Thinking for Unscientific Organizations, co-host of The Agile for Agilists podcast, and organizer of Agile Detroit. Drawing on experience in lean manufacturing, software development, and organizational change, he explores how organizations learn, why they fail to learn, and what history, science, and economics can teach us about making better decisions. He lives in Metro Detroit. Learn more at [...]
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2026
Fachbereich: Allgemeines
Genre: Importe, Wirtschaft
Rubrik: Recht & Wirtschaft
Medium: Taschenbuch
ISBN-13: 9798994532102
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Nelson, Brad
Hersteller: Katafy Press
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 229 x 152 x 13 mm
Von/Mit: Brad Nelson
Erscheinungsdatum: 01.04.2026
Gewicht: 0,368 kg
Artikel-ID: 135840916