<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In their 'deliberately short book' IT analysts, management consultants and technology practitioners Roehrig and Pring explore how big a beast technology has become, and how we can tame it to maintain our freedom and privacy while still realising its benefits. The pandemic has shown just how much we rely on technology and how addictive it has become...The authors address the important questions...[and] urge us not to slay the monster but rather to leverage its power and reorient technology as a tool for good.<br /><b>--Financial Times</b></p> <p><i>Monster </i>explains how we can responsibly engage with technology, and avoid its darker tendencies, while accepting its necessary gifts. The authors, insiders at one of the world's largest tech consulting firms, give a unique take on: </p> <ul> <li>The addictive nature of tech and how to fight it</li> <li>The growing backlash against big tech--where it's right and what it misses</li> <li>Crucial steps for taming technology's role in your life and in your organization--without becoming a modern Luddite</li> </ul> <p>Written for managers, leaders, and employees at companies of all sizes and in all industries, <i>Monster</i> will help you understand and take control of technology's powerful role in your life and your organization.</p> <p>You must read this book.<br /><b>--Michael Schrage</b>, Research Fellow, MIT Sloan School Initiative on the Digital Economy</p> <p>Pithy insights and recommendations on helping tech fulfill its potential as a force for good.<br /><b>--Erik Brynjolfsson</b>, Director of the Stanford Digital Economy Lab and co-author of <i>The Second Machine Age</i></p> <p>Making technology serve--not subvert--the public interest requires better leaders, not more engineers and coders. <i>Monster</i> explains how to become one of those leaders.<br /><b>--Rosabeth Moss Kanter</b>, Harvard Business School Professor and author of <i>Think Outside the Building</i></p> <p>A bracing new book about some of the most pressing questions of our time.<br /><b>--Carl Benedikt Frey</b>, Oxford Martin Citi Fellow at Oxford University and author of <i>The Technology Trap</i></p> <p>Provocative and concise, <i>Monster</i> is an important book on rescuing ourselves from technology that now feels corrosive and overwhelming.<br /><b>--Daniel H. Pink, </b>author of <i>WHEN</i>, <i>DRIVE</i>, and <i>TO SELL IS HUMAN</i></p> <p>Clarifies a complex web of issues and provides bold steps for a healthier economy, society, and future.<br /><b>--Francisco D'Souza</b>, former CEO and Vice Chairman of Cognizant</p> <p>Sheds light on how we can collectively use technology for the good of all.<br /><b>--Soumitra Dutta</b>, Founding Dean, SC Johnson College of Business, Cornell University</p> <p>A cornucopia of pragmatic, actionable, and bold ideas.<br /><b>--Gary J. Beach</b>, Publisher Emeritus, CIO magazine and author of <i>U.S. Technology Skills Gap</i></p><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>PAUL ROEHRIG, PhD, </b> is the global head of strategy for Cognizant Digital Business & Technology. Previously he co-founded the Center for the Future of Work. <p><b>BEN PRING</b> is the director of Cognizant's Center for the Future of Work. In 2018 he was a Bilderberg Meeting participant and in 2020 was named one of world's top management thinkers by Thinkers 50. <p>Ben and Paul, along with Malcolm Frank, co-authored <i>What To Do When Machines Do Everything</i> and <i>Code Halos.</i>
Cheapest price in the interval: 16.59 on October 22, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 21.49 on May 23, 2021
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