why not?
how to use everyday ingenuity to
solve problems big and small
by
Barry
Nalebuff & Ian Ayres
WHY NOT?: HOW TO USE EVERYDAY
INGENUITY TO SOLVE PROBLEMS BIG AND
SMALL (Harvard Business School
Press, 2003) is a primer for fresh
thinking, for problem-solving with a
purpose, for bringing the world a few
steps closer to the way it should be.
Idealistic? Yes. Unrealistic? According
to Why Not? authors Barry
Nalebuff and Ian Ayres, no. Illustrated
with examples from every aspect of life,
Why Not? offers techniques which will
help you take the things we all see,
every day, and think about them in a new
way. Great ideas are waiting. Why not be
the one to discover them?
Reviews:
"The notion that innovation can be "routinized"
is a perennial theme of business
theorists. This engaging primer is more
insightful than the usual
free-associational, brainstorming
protocols. Economist Nalebuff and law
professor Ayres insist that "innovation
is a skill that can be taught," and
distill it into a few rules of thumb,
like "where else would it work?"
(putting airline data recorders into
cars, for example) and "would flipping
it work?", which involves gonzo
conceptual inversions like students
raising their hands to not be called on
or "reverse 900 numbers" where
telemarketers pay people to accept
calls. Leavened with a little economics,
game theory, psychology and contract
law, the authors' framework furnishes
useful heuristics to analyze a host of
problems from auto theft to campaign
finance reform. The result is an
interesting compendium of
market-oriented socioeconomic fixes,
some intriguing (having HMOs sell their
members life insurance as an incentive
to keep them alive), and a few
improbable (offering Palestinians stock
in Israeli companies in exchange for a
peace settlement). Their system does
not, alas, always live up to its billing
as an assembly line for business
innovations. Many of the ideas they
showcase are culled from other sources,
and many, like having video renters
rewind before-not after-they watch the
tape, amount to trivial wrinkles on
established practice. The dream of
reducing creativity to a set of
automatic procedures, shorn of
expertise, trial-and-error, eureka
moments and plain old hard thinking
remains elusive, but the authors seem to
know it when they see it."
-
Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Barry Nalebuff is the Milton
Steinbach Professor of Economics at Yale
School of Management, and coauthor of
Co-opetition and Thinking Strategically.
Ian Ayres is the William K.
Townsend Professor of Law at Yale Law
School.
Learn more about the book
here