BOOK SUMMARY 331
Messy
·
Summary
written by: Jean-Marie
Buchilly
“...people respond to unexpected stimuli and constraints all the
time. We just don’t call it randomness. A good conversation is a constant
stream of unexpected responses. A new collaboration forces fresh perspectives
and demands attention.”
- Messy, page 23
Tim
Harford is an economist, journalist and broadcaster. Looking at familiar
situations in unfamiliar ways, The Undercover Economist, his
first book, is a fresh explanation of the fundamental principles of the modern
economy.
In Messy,
Tim Harford explores how the human qualities that we value—creativity,
collaboration, resilience—can benefit from disorder and confusion as soon as we
decide to embrace the constraint instead of resisting it.
The
author defines nine chapters, each one addresses a specific topic in which “a
little bit of mess” can sometimes lead to better outcomes. He made it very
concrete through numerous examples in which he identifies what the mess could
be and how it could help in our everyday life. The examples are interspersed
with research from neuroscience, psychology and social science.
Nevertheless
the book is more than a collection of examples and asserts a powerful but
counterintuitive idea that our “messy” parts ca contribute to our success.
The
Golden Egg
Messy
Situations Provide Fertile Creative Soils
"Messy
disruptions will be most powerful when combined with creative skill. The
disruption puts an artist, scientist or engineer in unpromising territory - a
deep valley rather than a familiar hilltop."- Messy, page 15
Some of
the greatest discoveries were borne out of messy circumstances. Penicillin,
post-it notes and microwaves are all examples of disruptive circumstances
leading to great results.
Forever
enshrined in scientific legend, the discovery of penicillin is really just a
case of dirty dishes. When Scottish biologist Alexander Fleming returned from
vacation, he found a strange fungus on a culture he had left in his lab, a
fungus that had killed off all surrounding bacteria in the culture. Modern
medicine was never the same.
In the
opening story of the book, Keith Jarrett first refused to play on the piano
that was put to his disposal at the Cologne Opera House, but eventually
produced the performance of a lifetime. The shortcomings of the piano actually
helped him.
Luck
favors the brave, and we can create environments that encourage this way of
thinking, by creating the right conditions for the new ideas to find their way.
Creativity can be boosted by getting away from the everyday and disrupting our
routines.
Imagine
you take the same route each day to get to work with the London Underground,
and one day you are forced to change because of a two-day strike that closes
171 of the Tube’s 270 stations. You have no choice but to try alternative
routes using buses, overground trains and the stations that remained open.
This
happened in 2014 and some researchers could observe that when the strike was
over, not everybody returned to their habitual route. One in twenty of the commuters
who had switched then stayed with the route that they had used during the
strike. It was faster, cheaper or preferable in some other way to their old
routine. All they needed was an unexpected shock to force them to seek out
something better.
Understanding
the benefits of such an experience, why not decide to try a new route even
without a strike next time?
Gem #1
Embrace
your Messiness
"We
are tidy-minded people, instinctively admiring order and in denial about the
way mess tends to be the inevitable by-product of good things, and is sometimes
a good thing in its own right."- Messy, page 2491
Benjamin
Franklin aspired to thirteen virtues among which we find frugality, industry,
sincerity, and cleanliness. He tracked his progress throughout his life with a
daily reflection in a specific notebook. Despite his brilliant career and many
accomplishments, he never mastered virtue of order, which he defined with the
statement: ”Let all your things have their places; let each part of your
business have its time.” This gave him great frustration, and strangers
who came to see him were amazed that tremendously important documents were
scattered carelessly on the table and floor.
Franklin
himself was convinced that if he could fix this deficiency in his character and
become less messy, he would become a more admirable, successful, and productive
person. One of the most determined men to ever live could not find success with
something that looks like a very simple task.
Why did
he fail in this regard?
Perhaps
he realized, on some unconscious level, that disorderliness was not an
impediment to success, and could even be a contribution to all the other great
things he created, discovered, and accomplished within his life.
Furthermore,
despite appearances, a big pile of paper is very far from being a random mess.
My messy workspace might be difficult for another person to deal with, but it
is a reflection of my journey, my work, and my creative process. That’s not a
failure.
Gem #2
Use
Mess to Win by Dictating the Rhythm
"In
a competitive situation, you win by beating your opponent. Sometimes the
opponent is relevant only as a benchmark; a 100m sprinter can tune out his
rivals and focus on the finishing line. But many competitors - a chess player,
a boxer, a military commander, a business leader, a politician - cannot ignore
the opposition. And one way to win is to encourage your opponent to
lose."- Messy, page 127
Mess is
not only an advantage, it is also a weapon. In the chapter about “Winning”, Tim
Harford tells three stories: the story of Lieutenant Erwin Rommel of the German
army during First World War, the story of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and the
story of Donald Trump, the next President of the United States of America.
These three people mastered the use of mess in a deliberate way to build their
path to victory.
The
idea is based on a simple mechanism. It is about creating a chaotic situation
that nobody understands and taking the opportunity to improvise a way through
the mess before the opponent. This tactic works as much as the opponent shows
an over-elaboration of details, rigidity of mind, and reluctance to change
positions as swiftly and readily as the situation demands.
The
three leaders mentioned above had an action plan, but they were able to adapt
quickly and part of their tactics was about agility and “breaking” the rules of
the game.
Rommel
did it by privileging speed over safety, expecting opponents to be destabilized
by this choice. Bezos did it by launching new businesses before being able to
deliver—Barnes and Noble had the following attitude to e-reading: “when the
market is here, we’ll be there”—an attitude that allowed Bezos and Amazon to take
the advantage. Trump used inflammatory comments to create buzz and set traps to
his opponents. Once they fell into it, he mocked his rivals on Twitter. His
opponents were destabilized and were not able to offer a proper reaction. It
can be a risky strategy, but the payoffs can be proportionate.
As a
person who struggles with order (building many paper piles), and who works with
companies to help them become more creative and better innovators, I enjoyed
reading this book very much. Harford makes his arguments through stories and
examples which appeal to me. Through all these examples, Messy shows
that what seems random can also be part of a deliberate plan. Planning
randomness and mess can be a competitive advantage in multiple situations, and
it is up to us to expand the field of application and put a little bit of mess
in our lives.
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