GRANTED: The case for closing open offices and opening our minds

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September 2022
The sweet spot of worrying about other people's opinions is caring enough to learn from them, but not so much that you conform to them.
 
It takes humility to rethink your views in the face of disapproval. It takes integrity to put your personal values above social approval.
 
Some links that resonated with my values this month:
1. The Trait That “Super Friends” Have in Common (Marisa Franco, Atlantic)
A psychologist specializing in the science of attachment styles explores how we can get better at adult friendships.
 
2. The Immortal Awfulness of Open Plan Workplaces (David Brooks, NYT)
The evidence is clear: open offices are bad for people and organizations. You get 27% more sick days, 14% lower cognitive performance, and ironically, 70% less face-to-face interaction. For the sake of health, productivity, and collaboration, we should all have access to spaces with doors.
 
3. Is Humanity Smart Enough to Survive Itself? (Jeanette Winterson, TED)
A riveting talk on the future of intelligence.

From my desk

4. The Value of Rethinking Deeply-Held Beliefs (PBS Firing Line)
Margaret Hoover and I discuss strategies for opening others’ minds—and our own—at work, in politics, and in everyday interactions.
 
5. Re:Thinking (TED)
My two new conversations: In solidarity,
Adam Grant, Ph.D.
Organizational psychologist at Wharton, author of THINK AGAIN, and host of the TED podcasts Re:Thinking and WorkLife
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GRANTED: My new podcast

Thursday, September 15, 2022

A monthly dose of insight from Adam Grant, bestselling author and Wharton organizational psychologist View this email in your browser You asked for a weekly podcast, and it's finally here. I'm

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GRANTED: Better arguments and new books

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GRANTED: Hot books for summer and what to do about burnout

Sunday, May 1, 2022

A monthly dose of insight from Adam Grant, bestselling author and Wharton organizational psychologist View this email in your browser May 2022 The highest compliment from someone who disagrees with you

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