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Humans Are Underrated: What High Achievers Know That Brilliant Machines Never Will

By: Geoff Colvin

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[Gallery description: A little tear at the corner bottom of the dust jacket]

As technology races ahead, what will people do better than computers?

What hope will there be for us when computers can drive cars better than humans, predict Supreme Court decisions better than legal experts, identify faces, scurry helpfully around offices and factories, even perform some surgeries, all faster, more reliably, and less expensively than people?

Itโ€™s easy to imagine a nightmare scenario in which computers simply take over most of the tasks that people now get paid to do. While weโ€™ll still need high-level decision makers and computer developers, those tasks wonโ€™t keep most working-age people employed or allow their living standard to rise. The unavoidable questionโ€”will millions of people lose out, unable to best the machine?โ€”is increasingly dominating business, education, economics, and policy.

The bestselling author of Talent Is Overrated explains how the skills the economy values are changing in historic ways. The abilities that will prove most essential to our success are no longer the technical, classroom-taught left-brain skills that economic advances have demanded from workers in the past. Instead, our greatest advantage lies in what we humans are most powerfully driven to do for and with one another, arising from our deepest, most essentially human abilitiesโ€”empathy, creativity, social sensitivity, storytelling, humor, building relationships, and expressing ourselves with greater power than logic can ever achieve. This is how we create durable value that is not easily replicated by technologyโ€”because weโ€™re hardwired to want it from humans.

These high-value skills create tremendous competitive advantageโ€”more devoted customers, stronger cultures, breakthrough ideas, and more effective teams. And while many of us regard these abilities as innate traitsโ€”โ€œheโ€™s a real people person,โ€ โ€œsheโ€™s naturally creativeโ€โ€”it turns out they can all be developed. Theyโ€™re already being developed in a range of far-sighted organizations, such

โ€ข the Cleveland Clinic, which emphasizes empathy training of doctors and all employees to improve patient outcomes and lower medical costs;
โ€ข the U.S. Army, which has revolutionized its training to focus on human interaction, leading to stronger teams and greater success in real-world missions;
โ€ข Stanford Business School, which has overhauled its curriculum to teach interpersonal skills through human-to-human experiences.

As technology advances, we shouldnโ€™t focus on beating computers at what they doโ€”weโ€™ll lose that contest. Instead, we must develop our most essential human abilities and teach our kids to value not just technology but also the richness of interpersonal experience. They will be the most valuable people in our world because of it. Colvin proves that to a far greater degree than most of us ever imagined, we already have what it takes to be great. ISBN:9781591847205

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Weight 466 g
Dimensions 235 × 160 × 25 mm
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ISBN 9781591847205