Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | 306.209477 SAT (Browse shelf) | Available | 033195 |
306.2 WEB Political writings | 306.201 SAS Territory, authority, rights : from medieval to global assemblages | 306.2092 RUD Postmodern Gandhi and other essays : Gandhi in the world and at home. | 306.209477 SAT Cascades : how to create a movement that drives transformational change | 306.20954 KAP Rethinking public institutions in India | 306.20954 KAV Imaginary institution of India politics and ideas | 306.20954 LAL Dissenting knowledges, open futures |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
What does it take to change the world? This book will show you how to harness the power of CASCADES to create a revolutionary movement! If you could make a change - any change you wanted - what would it be? Would it be something in your organization or your industry? Maybe something it's in your community or throughout society as a whole? Creating true change is never easy. Most startups don't survive. Most community groups never get beyond small local actions. Even when a spark catches fire and protesters swarm the streets, it often seems to fizzle out almost as fast as it started. The status quo is, almost by definition, well entrenched and never gives up without a fight. In this groundbreaking book, one of today's top innovation experts delivers a guide for driving transformational change. To truly change the world or even just your little corner of it, you don't need a charismatic leader or a catchy slogan. What you need is a cascade: small groups that are loosely connected but united by a common purpose. As individual entities, these groups may seem inconsequential, but when they synchronize their collective behavior as networks, they become immensely powerful. Through the power of cascades, a company can be made anew, an industry disrupted, or even an entire society reshaped. As Satell takes us through past and present movements, he explains exactly why and how some succeed while others fail.
There are no comments for this item.