Tarzan Economics
Eight Principles for Pivoting Through Disruption
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Narrated by:
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Angus King
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By:
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Will Page
Taking the lessons learned from his years studying the rise and fall of the modern music industry, Spotify's Chief Economist has crafted “a compelling and generous read” (Scott Galloway) that provides the tools to recognize and adapt to disruption in any industry.
Drawing practical lessons from a variety of fresh case studies covering Radiohead, Starbucks, and even Groucho Marx, Page examines the eight principles that disruption has thrown into sharp relief as keys to survival in any sector. Businesses need to be ready and willing to change and, if necessary, be prepared to rebuild entire organizations and business models to do so. Pivoting through disruption has everything to do with being able to see the revolutionary changes around the corner, recognizing your strengths, and having the confidence to let go of the old vine of doing business and grab onto the new.
A rare book of economics offering actionable takeaways in easy-to-understand language, Tarzan Economics is the must-read book for anyone staring at their own Napster moment and wishing they knew how to fail-safe their business.
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Critic reviews
“As the chief economist at Spotify, Will Page didn’t just react to disruption—he anticipated it and helped to fuel it. His experience in the music industry is full of takeaways for riding waves of change instead of being bowled over by them.”—Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author of THINK AGAIN and host of the TED podcast WorkLife
"Tarzan Economics is a wild ride through a turbulent industry: the digital music business. The book is fun to read and full of business strategy take-aways—from Napster to Mark Twain's patents, Will Page writes with verve and deep insight."—Preston McAfee, Google Distinguished Scientist
“This book carries lessons on two essential concepts in today’s world: the attention economy and the difference between builders and farmers. The takeaways are as relevant to running a large corporation as they are to starting your own business. A compelling and generous read.”—Scott Galloway, Professor of Marketing at NYU Stern, bestselling author of The Four and Post Corona, cohost of the Pivot Podcast
"Quite a few business books are about digital disruption. Others are insider's guides filled with juicy stories. A precious few are actually fun to read. Tarzan Economics is all three of these, and more. It will make you smarter about what's been happening. And what's about to."—Andrew McAfee, cofounder of the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy; coauthor of The Second Machine Age and author of More from Less
“Deftly extrapolating from the music industry’s disruptions, Page urges us to look skeptically beyond face value. He guides us on how to pivot our thinking by identifying factors that point in a contrary direction—sometimes subtle, sometimes hiding in plain sight.”—Mary Megan Peer, CEO of peermusic
"I didn’t think we needed another book about disruptive innovation. I was wrong. This is excellent: clear but full of multiple perspectives and good advice."—James Anderson, Partner at Baillie Gifford
Love for Music, Economics and Business? Read This!
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The author also mixes in humor along the way quite effectively. For instance, we are taught that monopolies are bad, but it isn't as clear cut in the tech world. To illustrate his point, he quotes a British politician, who says "Why is the competition authority a monopoly?"
While the author articulates his points well, he has a habit of creating strawmen, be it caricatures of the music industry in the late 1990s (yes, they were wrong, but it would have been nice to get to know what their pre-disruption lives were like) or Net Promoter Score (Few people I know treat it as "the only metric you need to know"). He also comes across as lecturing, forgetting that some of his audience is already doing the right thing.
The narrator is Scottish and speaks similar to the author (whom I've heard). However, the accent is a bit strong, and so try the sample before committing to the audiobook. I also listened at 1.25x speed because the narrator was a bit slow for me.
Despite the bit of lecturing, I would recommend the book to understand the economics of the times we live in, something that is absent from mainstream discourse.
Lots of great material but sometimes lecturing
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Learn to think ahead by measuring what you can't
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Great Read!
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