Join 📚 Fabien's Highlights

A batch of the best highlights from what Fabien's read, .

Tocqueville Paradox: As the living standards in a society rise, the people’s expectations of the society rise with it. The rise in expectations eventually surpasses the rise in living standards, inevitably resulting in disaffection (and sometimes populist uprisings).

MEGATHREAD TIME: In 40 T...

@G_S_Bhogal on Twitter

For example, in April 2008, Vermont became the first U.S. state to allow a new type of business called the “low-profit limited liability company.” Dubbed an L3C, this entity is a corporation—but not as we typically think of it. As one report explained, an L3C “operate[s] like a for-profit business generating at least modest profits, but its primary aim [is] to offer significant social benefits.” Three other U.S. states have followed Vermont’s lead.4 An L3C in North Carolina, for instance, is buying abandoned furniture factories in the state, updating them with green technology, and leasing them back to beleaguered furniture manufacturers at a low rate. The venture hopes to make money, but its real purpose is to help revitalize a struggling region.

Drive

Daniel H. Pink

It also means a change from thinking of the outputs of the organization to considering outcomes for the customer or end-user. “Instead of thinking of your company as providing a particular type of product or service—electric power, health records management, or automobile components,” writes PricewaterhouseCoopers consultant Norbert Schwieters, “think of it as a producer of outcomes. The customer needs to get somewhere, so you’re not a car company; you’re a facilitator of that outcome. The house is cold, so you help make it warm, possibly without supplying the necessary fuel. . . . Customers, in turn, are making fewer purchases to accumulate physical things and more purchases to achieve outcomes, convenience, and value.”

The Age of Agile

Stephen DENNING

...catch up on these, and many more highlights