The Moment of Clarity: Using the Human Sciences to Solve Your Toughest Business Problems by Christian Madsbjerg


The Moment of Clarity: Using the Human Sciences to Solve Your Toughest Business Problems
Title : The Moment of Clarity: Using the Human Sciences to Solve Your Toughest Business Problems
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 215
Publication : First published January 1, 2014

Businesses need a new type of problem solving. Why? Because they are getting people wrong.Traditional problem-solving methods taught in business schools serve us well for some of the everyday challenges of business, but they tend to be ineffective with problems involving a high degree of uncertainty. Why? Because, more often than not, these tools are based on a flawed model of human behavior. And that flawed model is the invisible scaffolding that supports our surveys, our focus groups, our R&D, and much of our long-term strategic planning.In The Moment of Clarity, Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel Rasmussen examine the business world’s assumptions about human behavior and show how these assumptions can lead businesses off track. But the authors chart a way forward. Using theories and tools from the human sciences-anthropology, sociology, philosophy, and psychology-The Moment of Clarity introduces a practical framework called sensemaking. Sensemaking’s nonlinear problem-solving approach gives executives a better way to understand business challenges involving shifts in human behavior.This new methodology, a fundamentally different way to think about strategy, is already taking off in Fortune 100 companies around the world. Through compelling case studies and their direct experience with LEGO, Samsung, Adidas, Coloplast, and Intel, Madsbjerg and Rasmussen will show you how to solve problems as diverse as setting company direction, driving growth, improving sales models, understanding the real culture of your organization, and finding your way in new markets.Over and over again, executives say the same thing after engaging in a process of “Now I see it . . .” This experience-the moment of clarity-has the potential to drive the entire strategic future of your company. Isn’t it time you and your firm started getting people right?Learn more about the innovation and strategy work of ReD Associates redassociates.com


The Moment of Clarity: Using the Human Sciences to Solve Your Toughest Business Problems Reviews


  • Andy Murray

    An outstanding book for anyone in Marketing who is faced with an abundance of data but a poverty of insight.

    In Leo Tolstoy’s nonfiction magnum opus The Kingdom of God Is Within You, he writes: “The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.”

    If you are not open to questioning even the most basic assumptions about your company and your customers, then you risk missing the new ideas that will be the future of your business.

  • Rodrigo Cornejo

    Finding business strategy books that are clear in their intentions is a rare ocurrence. While this book doesn't quite nail it, it aims to subvert the conventional wisdom that uses the scientific method as a basis for all business research, which is all too prevalent on most MBA's frame of reference: trial and error and experimentation that treats people as fixed variables and voilà. Too good to be true? You bet. The book makes that clear.

    While the authors don't go for it all the way, they make a bit of a critique of the Homo oeconomicus, in service of building better products for the market. It is a strange but interesting way to go about making market players more effective in catering to the needs, desires and erratic behaviour that people exhibit when you treat them as consumers and only that.

    For the uninitiated, it provides some references to phenomenology which sound more like Husserl than Heidegger but refer to the latter nonetheless. This is the third time I've seen Heidegger quoted in service of business objectives. The first was in relation to gamification ethics and the other one in regards to his method of inquiry. This is an interesing paradox, given Heidegger's distrust of modernity and his rejection of machines.

    In sum, it's an allright book. It provokes and entices more than it explains, it has a couple of useful business cases (the rest are a bit bland) and it is a light read. As someone living under the stuffy influx of American culture, the Europeanness of the authors is refreshing. God bless the Danes.

  • Marcela

    Tried to disrupt how we think about doing traditional market and user research but left me a bit confused about what knowledge we could actually gain or if the point was making sense out of ambiguity. Love that they used Genevieve Bell as an example.

  • Kumar

    Moment of Clarity proposes an exploratory technique for business problems centered around people with unknown unknowns. The technique called sense-making leverages methods from philosophy (phenomenology), anthropology (ethnography), and sociology. It starts out with reframing the problem with purposeful naïveté, collecting data through aforementioned techniques with a focus on experiences, looking for patterns, creating key insights and building business impact. A leader leveraging this approach will care, have a perspective and connect different worlds within the organization. Excellent cases on LEGO, Intel and Adidas are presented.

  • Jacob Senholt

    Excellent introduction to the method of 'sensemaking', using a combination of classical management consultancy practices and the insights from classical humanities studies such as philosophy and ethnography.
    Gave me quite a few insights as to what my humanistic background can contribute sensibly with at a higher level of business management.

  • Lisa

    I found this book engrossing and a good introduction on how to approach extremely challenging, vague business problems. I particularly connected with the first few chapters, jotting down notes several times to aid my thinking. I would recommend this book to anyone working on or interested in business strategy - not only is it short, the content is invaluable.

  • Jan Tománek

    The idea of so called "sensemaking" is generally interesting, but the book is too repetitive and shallow (way too much PR stuff). If you're going to read it, just leaf through it and pick up the rare good bits here and there.

  • Shrikant

    "IF YOU HAVE JUST ONE single takeaway from our book, we hope it is this: getting people right is the key to taking your business out of a fog"

    A book that challenges the way we look at problems and go about solving them. If you are into a business or company that deals with people then you should at least read this book once to get an idea of a completely different methodology of problem-solving.

    Study the experience behind everything. This won't be captured in your data. This has to be analysed through human sciences.

    Concept of phenomenology. How it can be useful to figure out the why or how people interact with things.

    How ethnography can be used to collect the required data for such methodologies.

    Sensemaking and its 5 phases.

    It also has examples of companies like Lego, Coloplast, Adidas, Intel explaining how they used the sensemaking process to get out of the fog.

  • Paulo

    Um livro sobre sensemaking.

    O título NÃO corresponde ao conteúdo. NO original, ver-se-ia "The Moment of Clarity" ou o momento de clareza, ao invés de "A filosofia nos negócios".

    Um bom livro, mas não um calhamaço dedicado aos filósofos. São mais análises de cases, com citações esparsas de uma ou outra frase de um filósofo.

    Em suma, o autor prega o "Sensemaking" como a solução para os problemas, quando o seu negócio começa a não dar bons resultados. No fundo, trata-se de usar o bom senso e voltar-se para as necessidades dos clientes.

  • Gillian

    A useful book for anyone, especially business leaders, who is interested in implementing qualitative research into their business. As a researcher, the first three chapters are a bit of a throw-away and quite sales-pitchy, but part 2 is quite useful. The case studies are all interesting reads and there are some useful take aways in the theory chapter and next steps chapters. You can definitely, however, tell this is written from an agency stand point and implementing research in-house is quite a different ball game. Nice read with a bit of useful information but nothing mind-blowing.

  • Carlos Castelao

    Really objective, clear view of one of the most obvious leadership behavior so scarce today that is sensemaking. People wait for answers to come ready, without criticizing or asking if the simple data process make sense or not. Really great reading for revisiting the common sense.

  • Benjamin

    I read another Harvard Business Press book in an attempt to better myself as a leader and a person. The biggest value I found in this book is that unconventional ways to address problems can be tremendously helpful.

  • Sokunna

    A must read for market researchers and strategists.

  • Avik Saha

    The authors talk about the importance of human sciences in addition to hard sciences when businesses forget about it's core value propositions

  • Navid Baharlooie

    If you don't know how human sciences operate in the world of business and organizations, I suggest starting with The Moment of Clarity. Books like this are important to argue for a more interdisciplinary approach and broaden our understanding of the value of this in problem-solving.

    The book deals with the qualitative sciences in contrast to the quantitative, and why in particular ethnography can be a very useful approach to researching and understanding the experiences and needs of customers.

    It's probably a better book if you're not trained in human sciences, but if you are, it still gives you a bit perspective and possibly a language to explain what you do. But I wasn't too happy about the depth—I had hoped for more.

  • Luis Adrian

    Muy interesante el punto de vista que plantea

  • Bojan Avramovic

    Smisleno, korisno, pogadja u centar. Pojedina poglavlja bespotrebno duga. Preporuka za citanje svakom preduzetniku

  • Jonathan Cook

    If you're looking for a how-to guide showing you how to enact the human-centered qualitative research that Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel Rasmussen have become known for, The Moment of Clarity will not meet your expectations. If you are instead seeking to undersatnd what Madsbjerg and Rasmussen mean when they talk about sensemaking and thick description, you're more likely to be satisfied with this book.

    Madsbjerg and Rasmussen do their best at offering a few philosophical guidelines around which deep qualitative market research can be constructed. The examples in the book are not as compelling or useful. The authors haven't found a clear way to communicate about their ideas and their methods, and often distance themselves from the attempt to establish such clarity - ironic, given the book's title. That they urge their readers to avoid reducing deep qualitative analysis to a few simple rules, speaks well of their preservation of sincerity and subtle understanding in a commercial culture that demands quick and simple ideas. Their struggles to bring coherence to the practice of applied qualitative inquiry beyond the superficialities of focus groups are in large part due to the lack of a strong literature on the subject outside of academia. They are to be thanked for beginning the larger effort to bring this challenging subject to the attention of a corporate audience.

  • Heath Henwood

    The Moment of Clarity is about understanding people, whether customers, employees or anyone around us.

    As such is mixes practical advice with theory about society, particularly business around us.

    The book has two parts - 'Getting people wrong' and 'Getting people right'. As one can guess the first part is about what businesses and managers are doing wrong, while the second part gives us the concept of sensemaking. That is using a mix of participant observation, qualitative data gathering and holistic analysis to arrive at new insights about what really matters to customers.

    The underlying theme of the book is about getting a true understanding of your customers that comes from understanding human behaviour.

    Not the easiest of reads, and there are better books on the topic in the marketplace.





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  • Jysoo

    The authors explains new ways of setting up strategical direction in organizations by focusing on human aspect. Although I find the topic interesting, the focus of the book need significant improvements. General introduction to the issue probably need a chapter or so, and I feel that the author should give more details on the case studies and/or practical issues on implementation.

  • Rick Yvanovich

    I liked the concept of the book and the points it made but was waiting all the way through for the boom moment of clarity ... it was sort of there but not much of a boom.

  • aljouharah

    كشخص خلفيته عن إدارة الأعمال صفر، وجدت أن أسلوب الكتاب والتفصيل فيه مفيد جداً وممتع وفتح آفاق عن المشاريع والأعمال لم أفكر بها من قبل.

  • Norman

    The idea of this book hit me as interesting. It was recommended in a UX context but I think it sells itself short by focussing on just 'sensemaking' - which is a term used a lot in modern business in a different way. A better way of covering the topic would find their framework - which is there! - and follow it to demonstrate many stories that make sense. Nevertheless this inspired me to re-think some of my methods