Welcome to the latest edition of Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly. It's time to vote for your favorite author for the Top 40 Innovation Authors of 2025!
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Drum roll please… At the beginning of each month, we will profile the ten articles from the previous month that generated the most traffic to Human-Centered Change & Innovation. Did your favorite make the cut? » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Geoffrey Moore |
In 2023 we simply could not stop talking about Generative AI. But in 2024 the question for each enterprise became (continuing to today) — and this includes yours as well — is What are we going to do about it? Tough questions call for tough frameworks, so let’s run this one through the Hierarchy of Powers to see if ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Art Inteligencia |
IIn the landscape of 2026, we have reached a critical juncture in what I call the Future Present (which you can also think as the close-in future). Our collective appetite for intelligence — specifically the generative, agentic, and predictive kind — has outpaced the physical capabilities of our silicon ancestors. For decades, we have relied on electrons to do our ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Mike Shipulski
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Your company believes everything should always go as planned. You still have to do your regular job. The project’s completion date is disrespectful of the work content. Your company doesn’t recognize the difference between complex and complicated. » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Art Inteligencia |
We are entering an era where the corporate antibody – that natural organizational resistance to disruptive change – is meeting its most formidable challenger yet: the AI CEO. For years, we have discussed the automation of the factory floor and the back office. But what happens when the “useful seeds of invention” are planted in the corner office? » Read the article |
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Guest Post from David Burkus |
Trust is the foundation of every high-performing team. It’s the invisible force that enables collaboration, fuels innovation, and keeps teams resilient in the face of setbacks. But when that trust is broken – leaders need to focus on how to rebuild trust carefully and deliberately. Rebuilding trust isn’t as simple as offering an apology and moving on. In fact, that’s where ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Art Inteligencia |
In the world of corporate strategy, we love to manufacture myths of inevitable visionary genius. We look at the behemoths of today and assume their current dominance was etched in stone a decade ago by a leader who could see through the fog of ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Shep Hyken |
Earlier this year, I wrote a Forbes article celebrating the 50th anniversary of the famous Nordstrom story in which a man wanted to return a set of used tires – even though Nordstrom never even sold tires. That fact didn’t stop the employee from giving the customer a refund. Right or wrong, that story is still talked about 50 years later! » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Greg Satell |
There are a number of stories about what led Hans Lipperhey to submit a patent for the telescope in 1608. Some say that he saw two children playing with lenses in his shop who discovered that when they put one lens in front of each other they could see a weather vane across the street. Others say it was an apprentice that noticed the telescopic effect. » Read the article |
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As 2025 continues, we hope your year is excellent so far. Please be sure and follow me on LinkedIn!
I hope you enjoyed this week's contributions from our guest authors. Future editions will arrive each Tuesday.
Please direct all speaking and workshop requests, commissioned writing inquiries, and podcast appearance queries to info@bradenkelley.com.
And, reply to this email if you would like to contribute articles to this newsletter. Sincerely, Your Host - Braden Kelley
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| Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly hosted by Braden Kelley, Seattle, WA, USA |
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