It's a wrap on MacroWikinomics
I should apologize and explain why I haven’t posted anything for a number of weeks. I’ve been working around-the-clock with co-author Anthony D. Williams on the final draft of MacroWikinomics. This morning the book went into production, meaning it’s pretty much out of our hands and up to the publishers to bring to market.
It’s been three years since Anthony and I wrote Wikinomics, which explored how mass collaboration was changing the way businesses communicate, compete, and succeed in the new global marketplace. But much has changed in three years, and the principles of Wikinomics are now more powerful than ever.
In this new age of networked intelligence, businesses and communities are bypassing crumbling institutions. We are altering the way our financial institutions and governments operate; how we educate our children; and how the healthcare, newspaper, and energy industries serve their customers. In the book we dissect why institutions are faltering and how they should change in order to stay relevant and effective.
To me MacroWikinomics is more than just a book; I view it as a mission. We need to reinvent many facets of society, and I will do my best to help that happen.
Naturally there will be a MacroWikonomics.com, which will host discussions, robust I hope, on how to make our MacroWikinomics vision come to fruition. We will also post outtakes from the first draft that didn’t make it into the final version. The first draft was 800 pages and we whittled it down to 400 pages.
I’ve really enjoyed collaborating with Anthony again. He was an effortless partner on Wikinomics three years ago and on this book he is even more brilliant. I’m proud of what we have accomplished. The book will be on the shelves this September but it can be pre-ordered now at any online bookstore.
Thank you for your patience.
May 16th, 2012 on
Our society is collectively creating, storing and communicating information at nearly exponential rates of growth. Most of this data is personally identifiable, and third parties control much of it. This personal data will be archived online forever and be instantly searchable, and few appreciate how many ways this data might be used to harm us.
Read more...
May 11th, 2012 on Reuters
A growing number of people argue that the notion of having a private life in which we carefully restrict what information we share with others may not be a good idea. Instead, sharing our intimate, personal information with others would benefit us individually and as a society.
Read more...
May 4th, 2012 on Reuters
Whatever happened to the “we”? We haven’t heard about it since the 2008 victory. “They built the largest online community in the history of the presidency,” says Andrew Rasiej, founder of Personal Democracy Media, which tracks the intersection of technology and politics. “But then they stopped talking to them and engaging them”.
Read more...
May 2nd, 2012 on The Globe and Mail
Recently, the smartest organizations have been rethinking what it means to be open. In this article I will show that there are three particular dimensions of openness that really matter in the business arena.
Read more...
March 26th, 2012 on The Huffington Post
The ‘Kony 2012′ director who was found naked in the street will remain in the hospital for several weeks. Danica Russell, Jason Russell’s wife, attributed her husband’s “reactive phsychosis” to the “sudden transition from relative anonymity to worldwide attention — both raves and ridicules, in a matter of days.”
Read more...
January 31st, 2012 on Social Media Week
The debate on the role of social media and change is over. Over the last year, many have questioned just how important social media are in helping activists achieve social change.
Read more...