Advance praise for
The Algorithmic Leader
Provocative, powerful, and full of actionable wisdom. The Algorithmic Leader is a tour de force of ideas and insights from global pioneers who are challenging the status quo and reinventing organizations. Mike Walsh has produced a must-read for every leader and entrepreneur in this digital age.
Daniel Hulme, founder & CEO of Satalia
This book first made me deeply uneasy, and then deeply inspired. Like you, I wrestle with how best to thrive as our world grows increasingly complex and confusing, a world where the simple rules just dont work anymore. Mike Walshs 10 principles, distilled from real-life experience and deep thinking, point the way forward.
Michael Bungay Stanier, author of the Wall Street Journal bestseller The Coaching Habit
Great companies are built on culture. Mike Walshs prescient vision of the algorithmic company of the future is no robot army of soulless analytics dashboards, but a living, breathing organisma community of humans who respond to motivation beyond compensation; purpose and impact; decision-making and autonomy; location and collaboration. A worthy read.
Brian Halligan, founder & CEO of HubSpot
Mike Walsh provides an interesting and informative look at our future, which will be defined by algorithms and artificial intelligence. The underlying technologies may seem complex, but the message for business leaders is simple: use the new tools to enhance your skillsor become roadkill.
Vivek Wadhwa, distinguished fellow, Harvard Law School, Labor and Worklife Program and author of The Driver in the Driverless Car
Mike Walshs years of talking to the worlds technology leaders have given him unusually deep insight into the ways in which technology will change our world. Now he has written a powerful book that enables the rest of us to gain that insight. This book will change the way you think. Full of rich examples and great quotes, it is like a hyperspeed trip into the future that will give you a whole new perspective on your industry and career.
Melissa Schilling, author of Quirky and Strategic Management of Technological Innovation
Mike Walshs The Algorithmic Leader is an intelligent and timely look at leadership in the digital age. If the twentieth century was governed by leaders of people, the twenty-first will be governed by leaders who understand the relationship between people and the technologies that define the modern workplace. Walsh exposes not just opportunities, but also potential pitfalls, ultimately leaving todays leaders smarter and better prepared for the coming rise of algorithms and big data.
Adam Alter, author of the New York Times bestseller Irresistible and Drunk Tank Pink
I have read many thousands of pages about the impact of algorithms and automation on our lives, and Mike Walshs The Algorithmic Leader stands out from the crowd. It is honest in its complexity, practical in its lessons, and profound in its analysis of the future of work. Its a must-read for anyone contemplating how smart humans can collaborate with smart machines.
David Epstein, author of the New York Times bestseller The Sports Gene and Range
The Algorithmic Leader is brilliant and scary. The scale of change that AI is bringing into our lives can be bewildering. In this timely book, Mike Walsh provides (often counterintuitive) ideas and fascinating insights into what the coming decades will bring. Read it twice, or to be safe, three times. This is an essential book.
Efe Cakarel, founder & CEO of MUBI
We are at the dawn of the artificial intelligence era. Mike Walsh offers a succinct guide for leaders to understand the secrets of the new algorithmic age, and how they apply in a disruptive and diverse global context. You cannot grasp the future of AI without considering Asia. Understanding leaders like Jack Ma and Masayoshi Son is as important as learning from Jeff Bezos or Reed Hastings. Whether you are working in San Francisco or Shanghai, The Algorithmic Leader is a cognitive tool kit for changing the way we think, how we work, and what it takes to win in an increasingly uncertain future.
Porter Erisman, former Alibaba vice president and author of Alibabas World
Mike Walsh has always been a fine teller of the futures stories. But this book is different. It offers not just a way of thinking about the future, but also a set of pragmatic and practical frameworks for navigating them. Oh yeah, and the stories are great too.
Genevieve Bell, director of the 3 A Institute, Florence Violet McKenzie Chair, distinguished professor at the Australian National University, vice president and senior fellow at Intel Corporation
If you want to start asking the right questions about the future, then Mike Walshs new book is the best place to start. In an age of artificial intelligence, we all need to reconsider ideas around privacy, privilege, power, equality, and even truth. The Algorithmic Leader provides strategies, frameworks, and importantly, provocations designed to wake us up to the fact that our world may look the same, but all the rules have changed.
Sean Gourley, founder & CEO of Primer
Mike Walsh is challenging the old models of management. He paints a future for leadership that has a lot more in common with the art of gardening than the art of war. Great gardeners start with a great vision and then focus on creating an ecosystem that understands, nourishes, and tends, allowing all to become their strongest, no matter what uncertainties they face, until they brilliantly fruit and blossom. Walshs principles tell us how it should be done, but then he passionately shows that it is not the how that matters but the why: to make our world a better place for all of humanity to flourish.
Ali Parsa, founder & CEO of Babylon Health
Artificial intelligence is transforming our world and our leaders. As Mike Walsh suggests, AI will place us at the heart of the network, as well as making us become the network. Thus decisions will be made in real time, based on live data and in-field analysis. And when the terrain changes, so too will our decisions, as we breathe our brands, businesses, and organizations rather than being detached from them, being shown possible solutions through the many filters, hierarchies, and vested interest groups that keep us from touching those very instruments we need to make informed, but flexible and organic decisions. This, however, doesnt mean the end of people; it means the rebirth of human intelligence, as we now allow machines to do what they need to doanalysisand we do what we were created to do: answer those bigger questions about the why, the purpose, the long-term beliefs and raison dtre of our business. Or indeed ourselves, as we learn to love the machine and become more human in the process.
Martin Raymond, cofounder & editor-in-chief of The Future Laboratory
AI is changing the worldand so should you. Mike Walsh has written a fascinating book exploring the consequences of AI and what can be done to use it to your advantage. A must-read for anyone who wants to not just survive AI but tap into its true potential.
Martin Lindstrom, author of the New York Times bestsellers Small Data and Buyology
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Work Backward from the Future
I believe myself to possess a most singular combination of qualities exactly fitted to make me preeminently a discoverer of the hidden realities of nature.