leadership

16-bit pixel art of a neon-lit analytics workspace at night featuring Seeing What Others Don’t on a desk, with dual monitors displaying “Information vs Insight” and “Perception and Framing,” alongside charts, notes, a calculator, dice, and a magnifying glass.
Books

Seeing What Others Don’t Book Review: How Insight Becomes a Competitive Advantage

A strategic review of Seeing What Others Don’t by Gary Klein, exploring how insight is generated through perception, mental models, and multidisciplinary thinking. This article explains the three sources of insight and why better interpretation, not more data, creates a true competitive advantage in investing, analytics, and decision-making.

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16-bit pixel art of a nighttime analytics workspace featuring the book Risk Savvy, with dual monitors displaying “Risk vs Uncertainty” and “Heuristics vs Models,” along with charts, dice, a calculator, notes, and a magnifying glass, set against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

Risk Savvy Book Review: Why Simplicity Often Beats Complexity in Decision-Making

A practical review of Risk Savvy by Gerd Gigerenzer, explaining how risk literacy, simple heuristics, and clear communication improve decision-making. This article covers risk vs uncertainty, natural frequencies, and the limits of complex models in business, healthcare, and strategy.

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16-bit pixel art of a nighttime analytics workspace featuring the book Algorithms to Live By on a desk, with dual monitors displaying “Explore vs Exploit,” the 37% rule, task prioritization, and caching concepts, alongside notes, dice, a calculator, and coffee, set against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

Algorithms to Live By Book Review: Why Computer Science Might Be the Best Decision Framework You’re Not Using

A practical review of Algorithms to Live By by Brian Christian and Tom Griffiths, explaining how computer science principles improve real-world decision-making. This article covers optimal stopping, explore vs exploit, scheduling, and caching, showing how to allocate time, attention, and resources more effectively.

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16-bit pixel art of a statistics workspace at night featuring The Art of Statistics book on a desk, with dual monitors displaying uncertainty distributions and risk communication visuals, alongside charts, notes, a calculator, dice, and a magnifying glass, set against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

The Art of Statistics Book Review: Why Understanding Uncertainty Matters More Than Ever

A clear, practical review of The Art of Statistics by David Spiegelhalter, focused on interpreting data, understanding uncertainty, and communicating risk effectively. This article explains the data to model to inference pipeline and why context, variability, and framing are essential for better decisions in analytics, finance, and policy.

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16-bit pixel art of a math-driven workspace at night featuring How Not to Be Wrong on a desk, with dual monitors displaying regression to the mean, expected value, and base rate visuals, alongside dice, charts, a calculator, and notes, set against a neon city skyline.
Books

How Not to Be Wrong Book Review: Why Mathematical Thinking Is a Decision-Making Superpower

A clear, engaging review of How Not to Be Wrong by Jordan Ellenberg, explaining how mathematical thinking improves decision-making. This article covers regression to the mean, expected value, base rates, and statistical reasoning for professionals in analytics, finance, and strategy.

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16-bit pixel art of a data science workspace at night featuring The Book of Why on a desk, with charts, notes, a calculator, and a magnifying glass, while dual monitors display the Ladder of Causation and correlation versus causation diagrams against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

The Book of Why Book Review: Why Causality Is the Missing Layer in Data Science

A clear, strategic review of The Book of Why by Judea Pearl and Dana Mackenzie, explaining why causality, not just correlation, is essential for better decision-making. This article breaks down the Ladder of Causation, causal diagrams, and counterfactual thinking for professionals in analytics, finance, and strategy.

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16-bit pixel art of a decision-making workspace at night featuring the book Thinking in Bets, with poker chips, cards, charts, and a calculator on a desk, while dual monitors display decision trees, probabilities, and “good decision vs bad outcome” visuals against a neon city skyline.
Books

Thinking in Bets Book Review: How to Make Better Decisions When Outcomes Lie

A sharp, practical review of Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke, focused on decision-making under uncertainty and the dangers of judging outcomes instead of process. This article explains resulting, probabilistic thinking, and how to improve judgment in business, finance, and analytics.

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16-bit pixel art of a late-night analytics workspace featuring The Signal and the Noise book on a desk, surrounded by charts, reports, a calculator, and a magnifying glass, with dual monitors displaying probability distributions, Bayesian formulas, and signal versus noise visuals against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

The Signal and the Noise Book Review: How to Think Clearly in a World of Data Overload

A sharp, practical review of The Signal and the Noise by Nate Silver, focused on probabilistic thinking, forecasting, and decision-making under uncertainty. This article explains signal vs noise, Bayesian reasoning, and why better judgment, not more data, leads to better predictions in finance, analytics, and strategy.

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16-bit pixel art of a data-driven strategy workspace at night featuring the book Competing on Analytics, dual monitors displaying analytics maturity charts and performance graphs, with notes, a calculator, and coffee on a desk, set against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

Competing on Analytics Book Review: How Data Becomes a Competitive Advantage

A strategic review of Competing on Analytics by Thomas H. Davenport and Jeanne G. Harris, explaining how organizations turn data into sustained competitive advantage. This article breaks down the DELTA model, analytics maturity, and the systems required to embed data-driven decision-making across business functions.

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16-bit pixel art of a nighttime analytics workspace featuring the book Data Science for Business on a desk surrounded by charts, reports, and a calculator, with dual monitors displaying probability formulas, graphs, and decision models, set against a neon-lit city skyline.
Books

Data Science for Business Book Review: Why Every Decision-Maker Needs This Foundation

A sharp, practical review of Data Science for Business by Foster Provost and Tom Fawcett, focused on how data science actually improves decision-making. This guide breaks down predictive modeling, overfitting, and evaluation through a business lens, making it essential reading for professionals in analytics, finance, consulting, and strategy.

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