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The Art of Business: Make All Your Work a Work of Art Kindle Edition

4.5 out of 5 stars 14 ratings

When you see yourself as an artist, all your work can be a work of art. Visionary business authors Stan Davis and David McIntosh show that applying an artistic sensibility to business improves performance—for both you and your company. They provide practical advice for applying creative processes from the arts to the business world. Using the strategies detailed here, you'll learn to add the depth, texture, and nuance to your business that will differentiate it from the competition and help you connect with your customers the way great performers connect with audiences. The Art of Business maps out the fundamentals of developing an aesthetic strategy to make your business, your career, and your life more meaningful and more successful.

Editorial Reviews

Review

The Art of Business is a good antidote to all the business-as-war books out there. -- Lawrence H. Summers, President, Harvard University, and former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury

Provides a new framework for thinking about creativity and excellence. Stan's and David's writing is compelling and thought-provoking. Bravo! --
Marc Scorca, President and CEO, Opera America, and Organizer of the first National Performing Arts Convention

Full of fascinating ideas about the relationship between the arts and business, between artistic people and business people. --
John Humphrey, former Chairman of the Board, Boston Ballet, and former CEO, the Forum Group

Put artistry in everything you do!...The Art of Business articulates this strategy so beautifully that everybody can use it. --
Greg Joswiak, Vice President, iPod Product Marketing, Apple

The Art of Business has the mark of both great art and great business it makes the profound look simple. --
Warren Bennis, author and world-renowned authority on leadership, University Professor and Distinguished Professor of Business Administration, University of Southern California

About the Author

Stan Davis (Brookline, MA) is a highly respected commentator on business in the future. He is the author of twelve books, including the bestsellers BLUR, 2020 Vision, and Future Perfect, as well as It's Alive and The Monster Under the Bed. David McIntosh (Newton, MA) is a business consultant focused on improving organizational adaptation to technological change. He is a Managing Director with Park Loop LLC, creating executive development programs for Fortune 500 companies.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B006WEQJ3U
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Berrett-Koehler Publishers (January 10, 2005)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 10, 2005
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.0 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 230 pages
  • Page numbers source ISBN ‏ : ‎ 1576753026
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 14 ratings

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Stanley M. Davis
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4.5 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2017
    Great Book!
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2005
    Many authors exhort us to hold two seemingly opposed notions in our mind if we want to make business breakthroughs. That idea is an important principle in the business classic, Built to Last. It's common for business experts to also espouse the idea of balancing perspectives such as the quantitative with the qualitative, the financial with a customer focus, and vision with practicality.

    More recently, some authors have started to see parallels between the worlds of the arts and business, such as in The Art of Possibility.

    The Art of Business represents the culmination of these new views of leadership by encouraging us to "make all your work a work of art." Although on the surface, that sounds simply like taking an artful and business-like approach, at a deeper level the book is addressing a very old tradition . . . that of craftsmanship -- creating something that rewards the soul as well as the body. The example in the book that resonated most with me was the new business model and product thinking behind the Apple iPod.

    If you are prepared to open your mind to more rewarding work and providing more rewards to those who employ your work in their lives, The Art of Business will help you expand your horizons in ways that will leave the world richer.

    This book will be of most value to those who understand a lot about how to manage what is . . . but aren't sure how to create what is needed, but doesn't exist yet. People who are interested in business model innovation will find this book contains powerful perspectives and paradigms that will enable that important work which I describe in The Ultimate Competitive Advantage.

    Bravo, Mssrs. David and McIntosh!
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2005
    A new age is dawning. If nothing else, this is a new age of declarations of a new age. In the business realm, these new eras usually revolve around empowered customers, Internet-related technologies, or non-hierarchical organizations and styles of leadership. Stan Davis and David McIntosh's vision has much in common with some of the more customer-centered visions, such as that expressed in Joseph Pine and James Gilmore's The Experience Economy. By opening up to the power of artistic flow, businesses can learn from the arts in areas including managing creativity, identifying talent, finding meaning in work, and working toward peak performance. The authors are urging executives to "make all your work a work of art."

    Why are we on the edge of a shift toward the aesthetic in business now? In common with many others before them, Davis and McIntosh assert that after moving from the Industrial Age to the Information Age, we are stepping into yet another era. In "Revenge of the Right Brain", Daniel Pink argued that the logical, left-brain thinking behind the Information Age was giving way to a new "Conceptual Age" that prizes artistry, empathy, and emotion.

    Similarly, Davis and McIntosh believe we are being driven beyond the Information Age by three basic forces: the rise of sound and images; the emotionally richer communication these enable; and the fact that these changes are happening faster outside than inside the organization. Just as executives now accept the importance of corporate culture-an idea that was little appreciated until twenty years ago-they are now beginning to recognize the benefits of focusing on the aesthetic and emotional dimensions of work and business.

    The Art of Business compares the economic flow of business-its inputs, processes, and outputs-to the equally real artistic flow. We need not choose one or the other; we can look at business through both perspectives at once. Artistic processes can also be understood in terms of inputs, processes, and outputs, even though the elements are very different. The elements of economic flow are inputs of raw materials or factors of production; all the processes of creation, production, and consumption in the value chain that transform inputs into outputs; and outputs of goods and services that aim to be better, faster, cheaper, and safer. The elements of artistic flow are imagination, emotion, intelligence, and experience; processes of creation, performance, and appreciation; and outputs that aim at beauty, excitement, enjoyment, and meaning.

    After exploring the ideas of dualities and artistic flow, Davis and McIntosh organize the bulk of The Art of Business around what they see as the main elements of artistic flow, then conclude with twenty suggestions for imbuing your work with artistry. The experienced business reader will come across numerous familiar examples, from the iPod to JetBlue, and far fewer fresh examples. You will find the occasional glittering nugget, such as one that crops up in discussing rich communications: "If Andy Warhol were still alive, he would say that, in the future, everybody will be famous for fifteen people." This is the best line in the book, and is accompanied by little to enlighten all but the most cloistered executives. In the end, most readers are likely to extract more benefit from The Experience Economy or Postrel's The Substance of Style, or from articles such as "The New Frontier of Experience Innovation" and "Lean Consumption."
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2014
    Item as described! Fast shipping! Thanks!
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2005
    The popular view is that art and business are separate spheres of life. If not incompatible, pretty close. What these authors do is make an excellent case that this is not true and specifically that there is much that business can learn from art. They then offer specific suggestions. It is a very interesting and thought provoking book. It made me think differently about business and even a bit differently about life in general. Well worth the read.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2005
    I discovered this book while searching for literature on creativity. As someone who teaches a required "arts appreciation" course at a mid-sized state university, I was delighted to find a number of things to share with my freshman students, many of whom are trying to get into our business school. An eclectic approach to subject matter usually helps professors "relate" better to their students in this course, and "The Art of Business" is an excellent addition to my library!
    4 people found this helpful
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