Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Best Practices Are Stupid: 40 Ways to Out-Innovate the Competition

Rate this book

A concise manual for starting and nurturing a culture of innovation in any organization.

Innovation isn't just about generating new ideas; it's about staying one step ahead of the competition.

Expert Stephen Shapiro shows managers and employees how to reach their full potential, offering seventy-five tested strategies for boosting innovation in any workplace. They include:

• Hire people you don't like. Bring in the right mix of people and unleash your team's potential
• Stop recognizing people for doing their job. That only leads to "more of the same." Instead, recognize people for challenging the status quo
• Define the challenge more clearly. If you ask better questions, you will get better answers
• Don't ask people to think outside the box. Instead, give employees a better box: well-defined challenges that will guide their efforts

This book will help any organization make innovation a repeatable, sustainable process at the heart of the company's culture.

218 pages, Paperback

First published September 29, 2011

24 people are currently reading
244 people want to read

About the author

Stephen M. Shapiro

22 books7 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
22 (17%)
4 stars
36 (27%)
3 stars
52 (40%)
2 stars
17 (13%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Paul Berg.
44 reviews
April 27, 2011
I read this during the 10 minutes each morning as my computer booted up. There were many good ideas in this book, as well as some boring process type stuff, but you probably need some of that process to make innovation happen in large organizations. I will hold on to this book as a reference.
Profile Image for Kevin Eikenberry.
Author 24 books29 followers
October 28, 2020
This is a book about creativity and innovation. And this is a book about organizational change. It is mostly about examining sacred cows (i.e. best practices) and recognizing that perhaps (in some cases) the best practice made sense in the past or on the surface.

But on the way to best practice status, people forgot or didn’t notice the unintended consequences.

- See more at: http://blog.kevineikenberry.com/leade...
Profile Image for Joana Botelho.
56 reviews5 followers
February 27, 2014
No livro As melhores ideias são estúpidas o autor defende que é necessário inovar de forma diferente, com maior eficácia. Só através da inovação permanente é possível sobreviver num mercado tão competitivo e em constante mutação, tendo que desempenhar um papel fundamental tanto no marketing, como nas vendas, como na gestão.
Leia tudo em http://blogbuythebook.wordpress.com/2...
Profile Image for Mark Fallon.
909 reviews28 followers
August 6, 2015
A well-written book explaining different methods and insights how you - and your organization - can become better at innovation. I'll be buying more copies to share with leaders I know.
Profile Image for Bruno Rio.
197 reviews6 followers
August 30, 2020
A very easy read with some sharp and useful ideas on innovation processes.
Profile Image for Tacoman.
19 reviews
December 19, 2018
Plenty of good ideas in here that can help someone compete in any business, as long as you're ready to think about how to improve. I liked the bite-sized tip "chapters". It was enough of any introduction to the idea that it got the creative juices flowing.
Profile Image for Angela Champ.
Author 5 books9 followers
January 2, 2019
We are working at being more innovation in our organization, and this book gives lots of great ideas on how to become more so. An easy and practical read.
Profile Image for Jim Razinha.
1,506 reviews90 followers
February 29, 2012
The Amazon lovefest reviews for this book (which I did not check until adter I read it) would have been misleading if one bought into them, but they were too over the top to be taken seriously. I wanted to read this because I am not too fond of the buzz phrase "best practices", but the title was deceptive.

Shapiro offers up 40 "tips" (note, not "practices") for corporate innovation. He should have stopped at 20...and even that would have been half again too many...for the last 20 were mostly gimmicks. "Amazing Race"? "American Idol"? "The Apprentice"? Please. Skip the pop "culture" and condense the book into something of more value.

Two stars for an okay effort - though to be fair, I did mark a few phrases in the book. Nothing new, but good reminders of things already known.
Profile Image for Silas White.
35 reviews74 followers
April 19, 2012
Wouldn't have bought this book individually, but it came as part of a package so I thought I may as well read it. It's mostly about packaging: a provocative title, and chapters as short accessible "tips" with gimmicky titles. A couple concepts sparked some further thinking, but were still reminders more than anything new. For such a short book, lots of repetition, just repackaged under a different tip/gimmick each time -- and because of this repackaging strategy, all the ideas also seemed rather compartmentalized and disparate rather than cohesively supporting an ongoing theme.
Profile Image for Megan.
99 reviews
Read
July 21, 2016
I chose this book mostly because it had the word "stupid" in the title.
Also because I didn't understand the premise behind it - why would a best practice not actually be the best way to do something?
As it turns out, business is different from education. In education, best practices obviate the constant reinvention of the wheel; instead, getting ahead in business depends on NOT doing what everyone else does. By the time a tactic becomes an industry best practice, it is too late for you to employ that tactic.
Profile Image for Angie Dianetti.
66 reviews
January 28, 2015
Some good stuff, but a lot of things seemed a stretch. Really it's about innovating in a large organization not best practices.
294 reviews11 followers
December 27, 2014
First things first: 799 for this book? Seriously? Overpriced.
Secondly, a lot of this stuff was based on basic management textbooks.
Profile Image for NJ Wong.
183 reviews3 followers
March 7, 2016
Contains useful advice on running a company.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.