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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
9,792 global ratings
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Think Again: The Power of Knowing What You Don't Know

Think Again: The Power of Knowing What You Don't Know

byAdam Grant
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Top positive review

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Colin
5.0 out of 5 starsBest read for a decade or more
Reviewed in Australia on 5 July 2021
If you’re struggling with mediocre team performance or wondering how to equip your child for the ever-changing world, rush out and grab this book.
“The power of knowing what you don’t know” is an apt summary of the contents. I have not encountered a book on an abstract topic that is such a captivating read.
The author strides through the different types of thinking in various contexts, such as individual, interpersonal, and collective thinking. He effectively guides the reader to consider the possibility of “thinking about how we think”. By removing impulsive responses, rethinking our position, then considering alternative views, and, when appropriate, refining our perspective will improve outcomes and enhance relationships.
Adopting various approaches to interactions, such as a preacher or prosecutor mode, is likely to alienate our position; however, adopting a curious and scientific approach to proposals from others will increase collaboration and the prospects of consensus.
Adam Grant underscores this standpoint with constructive observations on the remarkable success of teams, with individuals who are comfortable with a high degree of divergence in opinion. They have an ability to gain unanimity by a scientific approach of questioning, considering all proposed alternatives then agreeing on the optimal solutions. This contrasts with current norms where teams often have a dominant individual whose ideas are adopted as the group falls in line, ceding to position power. The ability to fully utilise the diversity of knowledge and opinion is compelling.
Adam Grant has exciting insights on education for parents, highlighting the advantages of delivering an environment filled with continuous review and improvement processes. The mundane delivery of facts via lectures is removed with future generations collaborating and reviewing ideas within a team setting. The focus on process rather than the individual will serve them and society far more effectively.
Rethinking how we interact has the power to open up paths that accumulate, distil and distribute the collective greatness of individuals and teams and offers a viable alternative to the extreme polarization of the modern world.
In the must-read category – a few times and then share with those around you!
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Top critical review

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Rina P
3.0 out of 5 starsNot a new concept, but still an important one!
Reviewed in Australia on 24 December 2021
3.5 stars.

This book talked about rethinking things we'd been preconditioned with, not only by family, friends and society, but also by ourselves (self-taught). It wasn't a new concept per se, but I agree that it's still not done often enough.

Productivity trains us, humans, to automate things we do repetitively and push them to our subconscious mind so that our active brain doesn't get overwhelmed by every single thing it processes and can focus on the select few, important things. While this makes us operate efficiently, the danger with auto-piloting is that we might get trapped into doing things the same way all the time because 'that's just how they have always been done'. Unlearning and rethinking things then become beneficial to break us off from this pattern. This is what Adam Grant covered in the book.

The topic of 'rethinking' in the book covered many aspects; it ranged from unlearning things, putting us off auto pilot, reviewing the so-called 'best practices', to challenging status quo. None of this was new to me personally, because these were all pretty much the trendy concepts that took popularity in Technology industry circa 3-5 years ago, marketed under the term of 'Digital Disruption'.

I like that this book used a lot of real person/world examples to illustrate certain ideas. I personally would prefer seeing a lot of examples within work/corporate environments because they would be more relatable to me, but I understand that Grant used examples he was most exposed to, which was mostly within the student/university environments. Having said that, there was an inclusion of Melinda Gates (and Microsoft) as a variation, so there was that.

Just like any good social science book, this was written in a great storytelling style. Concepts and examples flowed from one to the next, and circled back to the original topic as relevant.

One topic that hit me the most was in terms of 'influencing'; Grant described that people would have a better success at influencing others to agree on their ideas when they didn't present the subject as a polarising concept/duality (eg. right vs. wrong, right vs. left), but rather as a range of grey area. This was a great takeaway for me. I cheekily also wondered why this wasn't applied to the book itself - rather than just presenting the topic of 'rethinking' as a duality (auto-pilot vs. rethinking) with extensive coverage on the benefits of 'rethinking', wouldn't it be nice for the book to also cover the downside of it, such as losing productivity, overwhelming mind, etc? But of course, that might make the book a lot thicker, potentially rambly, and not as interesting!
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From other countries

Diane King
3.0 out of 5 stars Not an entertaining read but many worthwhile tidbits.
Reviewed in the United States on 20 April 2021
Verified Purchase
This was for personal growth. OK read.
One person found this helpful
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