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Meyer Publications
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Chris Meyer's full publication list as a PDF
Highlights from the full list...
BOOKS:
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Blur: The Speed of Change in the Connected Economy April 1998, Perseus Press by Stan Davis and Christopher Meyer
BUY
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It's Alive: The Coming Convergence of Information, Biology, and Business May 2003, Crown Business by Stan Davis and Christopher Meyer
BUY
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Future Wealth April 2000, Harvard Business School Press by Stan Davis and Christopher Meyer
BUY
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ARTICLES:
“Breakthrough Ideas for 2007: The Best Networks are Really WorkNets” February 2007, Harvard Business Review
“Breakthrough Ideas for 2004: Biological Block” February 2004, Harvard Business Review ARTICLE
(Full text requires subscription)
Anthes, Gary (Interview): “Rushing Toward Chaos” 02-09-04, Computerworld, Reprinted in Computerworld Brazil ARTICLE
“The New Facts of Life” February 2004, Wired ARTICLE
“Data Donors,” in Idea Fest: 23 Bright Ideas for a Stellar 2003 Jan 2003, Fast Company ARTICLE
“Survival Under Stress” Fall 2002, MIT Sloan Management Review ARTICLE ABSTRACT (Full text requires subscription)
“Search Parties,” by Christopher Meyer and Rudy Ruggles 08-01-02, Harvard Business Review ARTICLE (Full text requires subscription)
“Swarm Intelligence: A Whole New Way to Think About Business,” by Eric Bonabeau and Christopher Meyer 05-01-01, Harvard Business Review ARTICLE (Full text requires subscription)
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Now, New, Next: A blog by Christopher Meyer
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Department of Behavioral Economics
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I'm at the Milken Institute Global Conference, Shaping the Future. It's Davos-scale, 3,500 people, dominantly financial, though laced with energy types and health and medical people (the Institute is trying to do for global warming what their Faster Cures approach did for prostate cancer [lower death rates by 20%]). More on this conference in later posts.
Now though, consider this: last year, the 3,100 people who attended accounted for $4.5 trillion under management. That means every pair of Tanino Crisci's walking down the hall by the sponsors' tables averaged about $150 million of financial decision-making power. Which sponsors get the most attention? The financial institutions? Nutrition companies? Real estate?
The ones giving away shiny pens.
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Posted on
27-Apr-07 4:51 PM
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Re: Department of Behavioral Economics
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By
saraw1
on
2/20/2008 1:08 PM
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Chris, <br>This actually makes perfect sense. I'm sure you have read Influence, by Robert Cialdini, but if not, it's worth it....if only to remind all of us learned business types that we are animals first and people second. The shiny pen example is a perfect enactment of the social psychology principle of reciprocity: a gift begets a gift (even if the first gift is a pen and the 'return gift' is attention.<br>Thanks for the (instructive) giggle. <br>Sara Wedema
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Re: Department of Behavioral Economics please ignore earlier typo-laden comment!
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By
saraw1
on
2/20/2008 1:11 PM
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(Here it is in normal prose): Chris- This actually makes perfect sense. I'm sure you have read Influence, by Robert Cialdini, but if not, it's worth it....if only to remind all of us learned business types that we are animals first and people second. The shiny pen example is a perfect enactment of the social psychology principle of reciprocity: a gift begets a gift (even if the first gift is a pen and the 'return gift' is attention. Thanks for the (instructive) giggle.
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