This series traces how economies absorb, adapt, and evolve through 'development blocks' where technologies and logistics create new worlds, but policy shapes their direction and social impact.
The Rust Tax reveals how corrosion costs the global economy $2.5 trillion annually, representing 3.4% of GDP. Maintenance is not an expense but the fundamental rent we pay to occupy the physical world.
The mantis shrimp is a masterpiece of evolution, featuring adaptations that inspire modern engineering. From its damage-tolerant clubs to its extraordinary visual system, this crustacean reveals nature's ultimate engineering prowess.
A blueprint for breaking the mold of organizational inertia, designing ambidextrous structures, and achieving perpetual corporate renewal to avoid extinction.
A comprehensive framework of forty specific pitfalls across eight areas that collectively drive organizational extinction, going beyond the paradox to actionable insights.
How Nokia's sophisticated learning process led to catastrophic failure by drawing the wrong lessons from history, illustrating the dangers of flawed analogies.
Why organizations cling to dying business models, prioritizing short-term profits over long-term survival, and how this fatal embrace guarantees extinction.