Reviews

It Doesn't Have to Be Crazy at Work by Jason Fried, David Heinemeier Hansson

jonathonjones's review against another edition

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3.0

I liked some of the ideas in the book - interesting to see how they work. But there wasn’t enough substance here, and the analysis of most of the ideas was mostly along the lines of “we tried it one way, and then another, and this one worked for us”. Good to skim though.

noodleboy667's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a re-read for me. Going into 2020 I wanted to remind myself and ‘reset’ myself so that I can go back to work and create the best environment for me to do my best work. This means bringing back boundaries that have slipped and making sure work is work and home is home. This book is a manifesto for everything that’s wrong with the ‘hustle’ culture we read and hear about so much today. I love reading about the culture at Basecamp and the company inspired me to think differently about how I approach my work.

kjkbooks's review against another edition

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informative

4.0

Thoughts:
Good explanations both in how work is made crazy, how to create a calm environment and emphasis on the importance of work-life balance and a healthy environment. 

ekatemari's review against another edition

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4.0

Something I wish I'd read when first starting to work with startups! Thankfully far less relevant now :)

ferovolar's review against another edition

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4.0

Kniha pre majitelov firiem, alebo manazerov na c-level urovni

gianggggg's review against another edition

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4.0

Short and sweet. Actionable insights.

fmpereira's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

4.0

jess_segraves's review against another edition

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4.0

Solid 4 stars. I really enjoyed all the concepts and completely agree, but it was a bit too pithy and Food Rules for me to give it 5. I’m also intensely curious how Basecamp employees feel. CEOs always think they’re doing better than they are.

poenaestante's review against another edition

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2.0

While this book has a few gems, the central neoliberal contention that the rigors capitalism takes on the planet, the human body, and the collective psyche are merely due to the shortsightedness of employers is at best naive and at worst exceedingly dangerous.

The attitude evidenced in this book is glib and self-righteous, while their conclusions under-researched and thinly supported, offering only brief internal anecdotes. I honestly can't imagine anyone but their greedy publisher thought it fit to have them sit down and turn their uneducated opinion into prescription to fill the business erotica section of your major airport bookstores.

Every chapter is marked with brief anecdotes about how people like Charles Dickens, Maya Angelou, or Gustav Mahler structured their days. To my mind, none of these people took on venture capital or had much in the way of employees, so WTF does their "calm approach" to working have to do with the realities of the modern tech industry?

I know they are smug and self-satisfied that they've been able to build a successful company without VC money or a single office or employee in the Bay Area -- and to be honest I accept this as a feat as well -- but they still managed to fall into the typical Silicon Valley mindset that believes that the learnings and subsequent leadership style of their fluke can (and should!) be evenly applied across all other companies.

Y'all got lucky. Congrats. Now shut up.

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Update May 2021 - yup they should've shut up.

ashleyparamo's review against another edition

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4.0

Pretty good book. Would mainly benefit people who are interested in starting/running a business.