Hacking Work, Bill Jensen
Hacking Work, Bill Jensen
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Hacking Work
Breaking Stupid Rules for Smart Results

Author: Bill Jensen, Josh Klein

Narrator: Walter Dixon

Unabridged: 6 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 09/27/2010


Synopsis

Why work harder than you have to? One manager kept his senior execs happy by secretly hacking into the company’s database, providing them the reports they needed in one-third the time. Hacking is a powerful solution to every stupid procedure, tool, rule, and process we are forced to endure. Benevolent hackers are saving business from itself.

It would be so much easier to do great work if not for lingering bureaucracies, outdated technologies, and deeply irrational rules and procedures. These things are killing us. Frustrating? Hell, yes.

But take heart—there’s an army of heroes coming to the rescue. Today’s top performers are taking matters into their own hands: bypassing sacred structures, using forbidden tools, and ignoring silly corporate edicts. In other words, they are hacking work to increase their efficiency and job satisfaction.

Consultant Bill Jensen teamed up with hacker Josh Klein to expose the cheat codes that enable people to work smarter instead of harder. Once employees learn how to hack their work, they accomplish more in less time. They cut through red tape and circumvent stupid rules. It’s about making the system work for you, so you can take control of your workload, increase your productivity, and help your company succeed—in spite of itself.

About Bill Jensen

Bill Jensen is president and CEO of the Jensen Group, a change consulting firm he founded in 1985. He is also an internationally acclaimed speaker and the author of Simplicity: The New Competitive Advantage in a World of More, Better, Faster and coauthor with Josh Klein of Hacking Work: Breaking Stupid Rules for Smart Results.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Rory

Pretty thin on content. This book would have worked reasonably well as a single article.......more

Goodreads review by Dennis

Meh. HBR may have it right, Hacking Work may be one of the ten breakthrough ideas of 2010. The downside is, what Jensen and Klein have to say really could fit within the confines of a good HBR article; it's a bit thin and repetitive for 200 pages. That said ... it's a quick and fairly innocuous pages......more