My Reading Journey Backwards and Forwards

Category: Books (Page 4 of 5)

Measure What Matters

Author John Doerr

When dealing with numerical data, approximately right is better than precisely wrong.”
– Carl G. Thor

Natural resources management gateway

March 24, 2024

Published in April 2018, I purchased Measure What Matters in December 2018, but didn’t read it – geez. I bought it because wanted to be certain I measured what mattered.

I really don’t know how or why I didn’t finish reading it. There are 9049 reviews on Amazon, 66% of which are 5-star reviews, that’s 66%. There are another 32,179 ratings on Goodreads (as reported by Amazon). That’s a lot of reviews.

As always, I looked at the one-star and two-star reviews. The top one-star review found the book “dry, uninspired and a little creepy.” I disagreed and found the review annoying, but the thing I like about critical reviews is that they frequently recommend other books on the same subject, and sometimes, they are worth reading.

In this case, the recommendation is “High Output Management by Andy Grove – who is considered to be the author of OKRs. I have this book and, again, haven’t read it – so I’m going to add it to this themed read.

This is one of now 4 books in my current themed read about measurement and forecasting.

You can find the Amazon reviews of Measure What Matters here.

May 3rd, 2024

I’m still trying to figure out how to document this project – in the blog – in each book post? I really don’t know YET. I’ll figure it out.

I’ve just finished chapter 20 of this book – I’m going to have to read it again. Reading is great, but doing something with what you read is another ball game altogether, and that’s the point of the project.

My takeaways so far:

  1. My goals are very small – MINUSCULE really
  2. My thinking is foggy
Review Title

Superforecasting – Philip E. Tetlock & Dan Gardner

The Art and Science of prediction Copyright 2015

This is one of three books in my themed read about measuring and forecasting. Again I’m only 60 pages into the book today March 23, 2024, so I can’t say much about it, other than, good forecasting is possible and apparently useful – two concepts I’ve never bought into.

You can read the Amazon reviews here – there are 4213 reviews with an overall rating of 4.4 out of 5 – so 60%.

I often find the critical reviews of a book to be more helpful – though some are absurd. One 1 star review complains about the paper quality -and another recommends a different book which is actually about the Vietnam war – really?

Reading the reviews, however brings to me to the subject of todays Day 3 blog post which you can read here – should you be so inclined:)

How to Measure Anything

A book about finding the value of intangibles in business by Douglas W. Hubbard

Worth the Read?

“When dealing with numerical data, approximately right is better than precisely wrong.”

Carl G Thor

My rating of this book is not based on the quality of its writing or content but rather on how practical and valuable it has been in my life. Not an easy read.

It’s a great book, but it may not be worth the time if you aren’t struggling with the problem it addresses.

March 22, 2024

Reflections and Random Thoughts

One of the first things that came up for me was that not only do “big companies” not know how to measure, but they don’t even try! And here I thought it was just me that couldn’t figure things out.

Insights

Key Take-Aways

Measurements inform decisions. Decisions always have some level of uncertainty. Reducing the amount of uncertainty is the point.

Value of Measurement Matters. If you don’t compute the value of measurements, you are probably measuring the wrong things the wrong way.

Step one: Determine what you already know … even when you think you know nothing

Something Actionable

Review what I’m measuring, i.e., KPI, and consider the value of the measurement. Stop measuring the low-value measurements.

Keep a list of the decisions I’m trying to make.

What Everyone Else Thinks

In any case, I’m reading the 3rd Edition. It was initially published in 1962. It has 563 reviews on Amazon (in Jan of 2025) and a rating of 4.5 but only 3.9 on Good Reads with over 3600 ratings and 257 reviews. You can read the Amazon reviews here, and the Goodread reviews here.

Many of the poor reviews complain about the difficulty of reading the book and too much repetition. And, as usual, the folks who complain about the physical quality of the book they received.

Of Human Bondage – W. Somerset Maughm

First published in 1915. It is considered one of Maugham’s most famous works and is a semi-autobiographical novel that explores themes of art, love, and the human condition.

Or so says the internet – in fact it’s about obsessive love and I could not finish it. It’s a 600 page novel, and obviously it’s a classic but I got over 300 pages into it and just got to annoyed to continue reading.

When I read fiction I want to enjoy – and I was getting really irritated reading this book.

Until about 15 years ago, I finished any book I started – regardless. It was a rule – and I was still in a place in my life when I couldn’t break those kinds of rules. I couldn’t for example cook from a recipe if I didn’t have every single ingredient. I’m over it, (thank you Anne Rice, a story for another day) but maybe that’s why this book irritated me so much – what ever connection I have to my own obsessive-compulsive behaviors.

You can read the real reviews here

Wild

A Book about Hiking the Pacific Trail by Cheryl Strayed

Reflections and Random Thoughts

Started Sept 29th and finished Oct 5, 2023

I started this book in December 2022; my brother Connor gave it to me. I can’t imagine how I put it down without finishing it. This time around, I couldn’t put it down. At the age of 26, the author hiked 1000 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail. I was hooked after reading the opening paragraph of the prologue – here it is.

“The trees were tall, but I was taller, standing above them on a steep mountain slope in northern California. Moments before, I’d removed my boots and the left one had fallen into those trees, first catapulting into the air when my enormous backpack toppled onto it … I let out a stunned gasp, though I’d been in the wilderness thirty-eight days and by then I’d come to know that anything could happen and that everything would.”

Wild, Cheryl Strayed

This book has almost 73,000 Amazon reviews, 2% of which are passionately negative. The negative reviews range from accusing her of fabricating her story to complaints that she “probably only actually hiked three or four hundred miles of the 2600-mile trail.”

I found the accusation that she is “more interested in showing off her writing skill than telling her story” particularly galling. Perhaps more authors should give us less than their very best – lest we feel they are “showing off.”

Personally, if I manage to get my three-mile walk on the paved hills (not mountains) around my neighborhood completed more than twice a week, I congratulate myself quite heartily. And when I manage to write even a few sensible words about anything and have anyone at all interested in reading them, I feel like I’ve managed to do something.

She walked somewhere in the neighborhood of 1000 miles in the wilderness and wrote an engaging and beautiful recounting of it.

Review Title

What Everyone Else Thinks

In Defense of Wild

Read the Reviews Here. Buy it here.

The War of Art – Steven Pressfield

If, after reading this book, you do not feel compelled to begin whatever it is you are avoiding beginning – READ IT AGAIN.

Then read The Practice by Seth Godin.

From my Zettlekasten

“The paradox seems to be, as Socrates demonstrated long ago, that the truly free individual is free only to the extent of his own self-mastery. While those who will not govern themselves are condemned to find masters to govern over them.” (Steven Pressfield, The War of Art)

You can read the reviews here. You can buy it at the top of the same page.

The Myth of the Garage

Selected articles from Chip & Dan Heath

I started reading this book in December of 2022 and it didn’t grab me. When I finished reading Change I picked it up again. I read the note to readers and realized why it hadn’t grabbed me. I hadn’t realized it was a collection of columns they had written over several years for the magazine Fast Company. That explained why I wasn’t seeing the connections between the chapters – I was looking for something that wasn’t there.

It’s a quick, easy and pretty interesting read.

Some Notes from my Zettlekasten

“That’s what sticky ideas do—they make people feel something. Change comes from feeling, not facts.” (Dan Heath and Chip Heath, The Myth of the Garage)

“And that slow, inch-by-inch progress? It’s called winning.” (Dan Heath and Chip Heath, The Myth of the Garage)

“if you’re starting a company or launching a product, don’t get lured into scouting out a garage. Learn from your predecessors: First, get a job.” (Dan Heath and Chip Heath, The Myth of the Garage)

Change

A book about adult behavioral change – and how hard it is by Jeffrey A. Kottler

Reflections and Random Thoughts

I started this book in May 2022 and finished it last night, September 16th, 2023. It took so long not only because the beginning bored me but also because I tried to read too many books simultaneously. Especially if I’m bored – but that is a story for another time. I’ve recently committed to reading* one or at most two books at a time, so I finished, finally. But back to the book.

It’s well-researched, and there are several engaging stories of personal transformation and change. I am hung up on the subject of change. The conflict between the never-ending desire to change and the equally persistent resistance fascinates me. So I read a lot about it. Perhaps that is why I felt I didn’t find anything new here. But if you’re interested in the subject matter and haven’t read a lot about it you’ll probably find it worth the read.

“evolution hasn’t set us up for the attainment of happiness, merely its pursuit.”” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

Well, this one makes me feel a little better about never feeling like anything is quite good enough!

Notes from my Zettlekasten

“One of the most interesting mysteries related to change efforts is how small steps often lead to huge gains.” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

For more on this concept, read One Small Step Can Change Your Life – Robert Maurer Ph.D

“all behavior persists because it is doing something that is useful for the person,” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

What Everyone Else Thinks

You can read the reviews here. You can buy it here.

Shadows of the Neanderthal – David Hutchins

First Read November 2021

This is a book about Mental Models and how they shape our experience of the world. I try to read it at least every year.

From the book – “Here’s the moral: The way we see the world affects our experience of the world. When the way we see the world changes, we can then change our role in the world and get very different results. Herein lies the key to remarkable and enduring change. For” (David Hutchens, Shadows of the Neanderthal) #mental_models #change

Digital Zettlekasten

author David Kadavy

March 28, 2023

Now this book, I love. It clearly explains some basic concepts about Zettlekasten that I’ve had trouble with. Like the definitions of fleeting notes relative to literature notes relative to permanent notes. I’ve been trying to understand this for two years!

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