1.
The World is Flat:
A Brief History of the
Twenty-first Century by Thomas
Friedman,
foreign
affairs columnist for the New
York Times and best-selling author. "The global
economic playing field is being
leveled," said Friedman in a
recent lecture at the Smith
School. The lowering of
trade and political barriers and
the exponential technical
advances of the digital
revolution have made it possible
to do business instantaneously
with billions of other people
across the planet. Friedman said
that when we "stopped paying
attention after 9/11" is when
this development began to
accelerate. Globalization 3.0, as he calls
it, is driven not by major
corporations or giant trade
organizations, but by individuals
and small groups from all over the
world (but especially in India
and China) who can compete and
win not just low-wage, but
high-end research and design
contracts. Professor Ritu Agarwal, Dean's Chair of
Information Systems, calls
The World is Flat a "must
read" and Dean Howard Frank
says it should be first on
your summer reading list.
"Friedman has perfectly
articulated the incredible
changes taking place before our
eyes and that will continue to
take place for the next 10 to 15
years," says Frank.
2.
The
Modern Firm by John Roberts,
a leading economist and expert
on business strategy and
organization, was recognized by
The Economist as "Best
Business Book" for 2004.
"Roberts applies recent
scholarship in game theory and
information economics to key
problems in strategy and
organizational design and, in
particular, the issue of
incentives within organizations,"
says Shreevardhan Lele, MBA
academic director and teaching
professor of decision sciences
at Smith.
"It is by far the best
non-technical presentation of
the economics of organization
from one of the leading
researchers in this field."
3.
The End of Poverty:
Economic Possibilities for Our
Time by Jeffrey Sachs.
"Sachs
is well-known for his
influential advising on economic
reform in countries such as
Bolivia, Poland and Russia,"
says Curt Grimm, Dean's
Professor of Supply Chain and
Strategy at Smith. "The first
part of the book provides Sachs'
perspective on the global
economy, and a retrospective on
economic reform and transition
in the countries he advised. The
latter half of the book explores
the title theme - causes and
potential cures for global
poverty - drawing extensively on
Sachs' work in Africa over the
past 10 years. This is a
thought-provoking and
well-documented treatment of a
subject of paramount importance,
by an economist who combines
impeccable academic credentials
with unique first-hand
experience."
4. Ethics at Work:
Creating Virtue In An American
Corporation by Daniel
Terris, director of the
International Center for Ethics,
Justice and Public Life at
Brandeis University. Terris
gives an enlightening assessment
of the ethics program at
Lockheed Martin, one of the
world's largest defense
contractors. He explains that in
America the defense industry has
the most developed set of ethics
programs of any business sector.
Lockheed Martin spends millions
of dollars a year on ethics
initiatives, employing 65
"ethics officers" and requiring
all employees (more than
130,000) to devote at least one
hour per year to the
consideration of ethical issues.
Cherie Scricca, associate
dean of masters programs and
career management, says,
"Understanding the framework
that a leading corporation
employs to promote and deal with
issues of ethics is important
for anyone operating in business
and industry today. "
5. Blink by Malcolm
Gladwell, columnist for
The New Yorker magazine.
Blink is about rapid
cognition -- the first two
seconds of looking, the snap
judgment. Building his case with
typical scenes from life (a
marriage, choking on the golf
course, selling cars, etc.),
Gladwell asks readers to rely on
their "adaptive unconscious" and
use this rational intuition to
make instant conclusions.
Scott Koerwer, associate
dean for professional programs
and services, says, "How often
have you just known deep in your
gut something was wrong or right
but you resist the impulse, seek
more data and end up over
complicating a situation and or
a decision? Gladwell is on to
something here...trusting
yourself and your instincts is
something that all great leaders
understand."
6. The Tipping Point:
How Little Things Can Make a Big
Difference by Malcolm
Gladwell, columnist for
The New Yorker magazine.
Tor Andreassen, visiting
professor of marketing, says
that both of Gladwell's books on
our list gave him "enormous joy
and insight." The Tipping
Point is an examination of
social epidemics and presents a
new way of understanding why
change happens as quickly and
unexpectedly as it does.
7. Winning by
Jack Welch, retired CEO of
General Electric. "Winning
is a great book," says Joyce
Russell, teaching professor
of management and organization.
"It has some excellent tips for
effective leadership and
managing people." The book
describes the management wisdom
that Welch built up through four
and a half decades of work at
GE, as he transformed the
company into to a dynamic
corporation worth nearly half a
trillion dollars. Testimonials
on the book come from Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, Rudy
Giuliani, and Tom Brokaw, as
well as Fortune, Business
Week and The Financial Times.
8. The One Thing
You Need to Know : ... About
Great Managing, Great Leading,
and Sustained Individual Success
by Marcus Buckingham,
social science researcher and
business consultant. "It offers
many informative career lessons
that should be of value to any
business person," says Joyce
Russell, teaching professor
of management and organization.
Buckingham describes that single
"controlling insights" exist for
a whole range of situations and
explains what each key concept
is for managing, leading, and
individual performance. He
differentiates leading and
managing: "When you want to
manage, begin with the person.
When you want to lead, begin
with the picture of where you
are headed."
9. Pattern Recognition
by William Gibson. "The
first of William Gibson's
usually futuristic novels to be
set in the present, Pattern
Recognition is a masterful
snapshot of modern consumer
culture and hipster esoterica,"
says Chris Dellarocas,
assistant professor of
information systems. Set in
London, Tokyo, and Moscow,
Pattern Recognition takes
the reader on a tour of a global
village inhabited by
power-hungry marketers,
industrial saboteurs, high-end
hackers, Russian mob bosses,
Internet fan-boys, techno
archeologists, washed-out spies,
cultural documentarians, and the
heroine Cayce Pollard--a
soothsaying "cool hunter" with
an allergy to brand names.
Pollard is among a cult-like
group of Internet obsessives
that strives to find meaning and
patterns within a mysterious
collection of video moments,
merely called "the footage," let
loose onto the Internet by an
unknown source. Her hobby and
work collide when a megalomaniac
client hires her to track down
whoever is behind the footage.
Cayce's quest will take her in
and out of harm's way in a
high-stakes game that ultimately
coincides with her desire to
reconcile her father's
disappearance during the
September 11 attacks in New
York. "This book is an
entertaining and
thought-provoking statement on
the impact of globalization,
online communities, and buzz
marketing on our societies and
culture by one of the masters of
cyber-punk fiction," says
Dellarocas.
Also recommended is a new
book by Smith School professors:
10. Beware the Winner's
Curse: Victories
That Can Sink You and Your
Company by
Professors G. Anandalingam and
Hank Lucas. "I like this
book because it addresses the
psychological and market-related
factors that may cause a manager
to overvalue an asset or an
acquisition, thereby being
cursed with the undesirable
outcome of paying much more than
what the asset is worth," says
Smith's Senior Associate Dean
and Professor Arjang Assad.
"In a managerial culture
obsessed with winning, this book
highlights an important caution.
I believe that the analytic
framework the authors use to
analyze the "winner's curse" is
a valuable addition to the
mental toolkit of the astute
manager. But the real strength
of the book is the wealth of
illustrations drawn from various
business and industry segments
that show how the winner curse
is a frequent and widespread
danger."
► For additional new books by
Smith faculty, please visit the
latest edition of
Smith Business magazine or
our comprehensive
Faculty Books Web page.