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  • Think in Systems

  • Complexity Made Simple: The Theory and Practice of Strategic Planning, Problem Solving, and Creating Lasting Results
  • Written by: Zoe McKey
  • Narrated by: Anna Doyle
  • Length: 2 hrs and 38 mins
  • 3.2 out of 5 stars (6 ratings)

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Think in Systems

Written by: Zoe McKey
Narrated by: Anna Doyle
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Publisher's Summary

Are you stuck in a rut despite your best efforts to get out? Looking for long-term solutions to your problems?

We have the best of intentions to improve our conditions, but often our solutions fall short of improving our lives. Sometimes our best efforts can result in the opposite of what we want over time. How can we avoid these unwanted results?

If we apply conventional thinking to complex issues, we often maintain or increase the very problems we want to fix. There is, however, a solution to get the desired results.

Think in Systems is a concise information manual offering high-level problem-solving methods for personal and global issues. The guide presents the main features of systems thinking in an understandable and everyday manner, helping you to develop this skill top analysts and world leaders use.

If you thought that complex thinking is only for people who deal with complex issues like running a company or country, think again. Every issue is complex. Running out of gas is a simple problem, but I’m sure you’re dealing with much greater headaches on a daily basis.

Your life is a system. Everything that is connected to your system (life) is a part of it. However, you are just a subsystem in the larger picture. Your town, country, the world, the solar system are all bigger systems you are a part of. These systems are interconnected. Whatever you do will affect the system, and whatever the system does will affect your life.

Systems can have positive and negative effect on your life - or on the life of people generally. The greatest problems like hunger, war, and poverty are all failures in the system. Similarly, fights with your loved ones, being stuck in a rut at your job are also system failures. They are not only your fault. Thus they can’t be fixed with a simple cause-effect thinking.

Learn to use systems thinking in your business, relationships, friendships, and general political, socio-economic, and environmental issues. Systems thinking boosts your critical thinking skills, makes you more logical, enhances your analytical abilities, and makes you more creative. Systems thinking won’t put extra pressure on your cognition. Quite the contrary, you’ll have fewer headaches knowing that you surely didn’t miss any detail when you tried to solve a problem.

Identify your problems more accurately. Find solutions to your problems, don’t just treat the symptoms. Map out a strategic action plan to change your circumstances. Become more patient by understanding the world - and your place in it - better. Shift your focus from the unimportant details and focus on the real issues. Stay a learner.

Apply systems thinking in your problem solving, decision making, and strategic planning without the need to become a technical professional.

©2018 Zoe McKey (P)2018 Zoe McKey
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Please redo this audio with a better narrator

I am still at the start of this book. I have listened to various titles and genres in audible and elsewhere so far and in comparison the narration of this book is one of the worst I have listened to. Sad to put this feedback as I don’t want anyone to loose a job, but truly, a listener needs the narrator to articulate and pronounce the words complete and proper. This narrator chews all the words. It’s as if she is a fast speaking machine who sticks many of the words together and also doesn’t want to finish pronouncing one in full before starting the next word.

In the first 30 minutes of the book, I have been going back several times and also putting the speed to 0.75 and I still can’t seem to hear the words articulated.

The purpose of an audio book is to not need a hard copy. But this narration is so bad that I thought: maybe I have to go buy the hard copy and hold it in my hand while she is reading, to be able to follow and understand the words.

I am pretty bummed about this, as the topic is very interesting. I may need to return this book if I have to keep rewinding as that’s a waste of time.

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