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Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard

Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard

byChip Heath
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4.0 out of 5 starsSwitch Deficiencies and Recommendations
Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2010
Switch is a book Josef Goebbels, Adolf Hitler's Minister of Propaganda, would rate with five stars. Goebbels's Principles of Propaganda, just like the Switch change framework (Direct the Rider, Motivate the Elephant, and Shape the Path) excises Values and Goal Setting from Change. What remains is a set of tactics Switch identifies to realize change no matter what goals and values the leaders want to achieve and realize. Although the change framework in Switch potentially provides powerful tactics for change, Switch has some major and fatal deficiencies.

The framework with its tactics for change described in SWITCH - HOW TO CHANGE THINGS WHEN CHANGE IS HARD by Chip Heath and Dan Heath published by Broadway Books, New York 2010 has some major and fatal deficiencies. (I will use the term "change framework" as a convenient way to refer to the Switch framework and tactics for change described in this book.)

The change framework
* Is amoral and value neutral,
* Is dangerous and provides a potentially powerful means for propaganda,
* Discounts reason and is inconsistent with its formulation,
* Can be used to establish and sustain totalitarianism, potentially resulting in holocausts,
* Is missing the ethical compass, the Superego from Freud's standpoint, and
* Is inimical to democracy and potentially supportive of totalitarianism

It is recommended that the authors augment the book by providing a methodology for how members in a group can democratically formulate and support worthy goals to satisfy the critical and important needs of the group in a manner consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.

The change framework is amoral and value neutral. There is no discussion in Switch about what makes a goal desirable (e.g., using methods of Immanuel Kant, utilitarianism, or Sir William Walter Ross) and worthy of attainment in the context of the ethical values. There is no discussion on how to identify goals that are worthy of attainment in the context of these ethical values and real needs. In the wrong hands, it could be used as an effective recipe for despotism. The goals are critically important.

The change framework is dangerous and provides a potentially powerful means for propaganda. The framework may be extremely dangerous if effective. It is like giving a loaded gun with instructions on how to effectively use it without providing the user advice on the ethical use of the gun, e.g., under what (very restricted) conditions (e.g., target practice and self-defense), it is ethically permissible to use it.

Without the moral compass, Switch provides a simple framework for propaganda, which consists of tactics aimed at influencing or manipulating attitudes and behaviors of an individual or a community to help realize one or more goals. Many of the tactics identified in Switch are similar to those proposed by Goebbels and other advocates of propaganda. See [...]The change framework discounts reason and is inconsistent with its formulation. The framework explicitly discounts reason. The framework explicitly discounts reason by asserting that the Rider will think in "True But Useless" (TBU) circles if not given direction. It claims that the Rider will not be able to set the direction if the Elephant opposes the rider`s direction. But isn't the change framework itself a rational mechanism that the Rider can use to nudge or coax the Elephant to move in the direction that Rider chooses? Even though the framework explicitly discounts reason, it provides the Rider (the intellect) the means by which to influence the elephant. Therefore, the change framework enables the intellect and reason to greatly influence if not control the emotions of the Elephant.

If the intellect and reason are really as Switch portrays, how did the change framework become articulated, presented, and communicated? The Rider as described in the Switch could not have formulated the change framework. It would simply think in circles (TBU). In Switch, the Leader when equipped with the framework and tactics for change is the agent of change.

The framework and tactics for change must have been created by a series of clever Riders, don't you think? The Elephant didn't create the change framework. Overtime, the authors of propaganda and change literature, including the books referenced in "Recommendations for Additional Reading," accumulated knowledge that the Switch authors synthesized into this very powerful change framework. The Rider is not the weak analyzer Switch would have you believe. Riders created the change framework that enable the Rider some level of mastery over the Elephant. Reason created the change framework. Therefore, reason and the Rider are of paramount importance.

The change framework can used to establish and sustain totalitarianism, potentially resulting in holocausts. Switch pays little attention to the Leaders. But how does the Leader relate to the framework and the tactics for change? Who are the Leaders and what is their relationship to the Riders and Elephants? In the case of an individual, it is your reason equipped with the change framework. Generally, a Leader is a person (Rider/Elephant) who is expert in the change framework and who is in a leadership position of responsibility for a group of people or community to help the group or community satisfy some of its most important needs by applying the framework and tactics for change in a manner as consistent as possible with the prevailing and pluralistic ethical values of the members of the group or community. There should be much more discussion about Leaders and how they relate to the change framework. The last century should have taught us that unbridled reason (The Rider with propaganda) threatens to erupt in holocaust without an ethical compass.

The change framework is missing the ethical compass, the Superego from Freud's standpoint.
Freud (Beyond the Pleasure Principle 1920 and The Ego and the Id 1923) would have called the ethical compass, which is totally missing in the Switch, the Superego. He would have called the Elephant the Id and the Rider the Ego. The rational Ego attempts to resolve or at least mitigate the conflict between the Id (Elephant) and the Superego (the ethical compass). The change framework is a good means to help mitigate if not resolve this conflict.

Because there is no understanding of the connection between these tactics and worthy goals in the context of ethical values, Switch misses the opportunity to provide direction (to the Ego) on how identify the specific tactics for change that would be effective given the nature of the goals that ought be realized in the context of the ethical compass (Superego). The framework provides no methodology for the selection of specific tactics given worthy goals in the context of evolved ethical values.

The change framework is inimical to democracy and potentially supportive of totalitarianism. For a description of totalitarianism see [...]. How does the Switch framework with its leaders relate to a democratic society? The Switch encourages the Leaders to separate themselves from the other members of the group. The Leaders somehow determine the goals (the framework provides no guidance) and use the framework with its tactics for change to manipulate the other members of the group to realize the goals. There is no discussion of how the leaders formulate worthy goals that are consistent the leaders' group ethical values and genuine needs. This framework and its tactics for change can very easily be used to establish and sustain totalitarianism. The fatal flaw of the framework is the absence of an ethical component.

Some recommendations follow. The authors should augment the framework with an ethical compass. They should provide advice and methods to discover the prevailing and pluralistic values of the group. They should provide advice to the members of the group on how to democratically identify the critical and important needs of the group in the context of the group's prevailing pluralistic values. They should provide a methodology for how members in a group can democratically formulate worthy goals in the context of the group's prevailing pluralistic values to satisfy the critical and important needs of the group in a manner consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.

With the satisfaction of these recommendations, Switch can be transformed from a potentially dangerous amoral change framework into an ethically directed and integrated framework for change that helps satisfy real needs using tactics for change that are consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.
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J. C. Munene
3.0 out of 5 starsSwitch by Chip and Dan Heath
Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2012
The Heaths have written an accessible small book on change management. It is based on three principles namely:
1. Make clear what needs to change and what must be done
2. Provide a strong case for wanting the change to take place and participating in the implementation of the change
3. Clear the path or situation for change since a people problem (resistance to change) is often a situational problem (unknown roadblocks, contradicting norms and bureaucratic rules etc.).

These principles are useful as "quickies" especially if you are an internal or external consultant trying to convince your client to do something about an undesirable situation. The Heaths provide an example of how to win the minds of clients by getting the former to work out for themselves the real need to make the move to change. The example based on the deficit model of management (as against the flourishing model) is compelling both to the client who it was meant to impress and to the reader (such as myself). It is the kind of example an internal consultant may want to emulate. The example has two characteristics:
(1) Within the context in which it was delivered by the internal consultant, the example of what was going on was sufficiently catastrophic to raise the emotions of the client
(2) It allowed the client to work out what it meant in terms of figures (instead of the internal consultant to work out the figures). This provided the intellectual and cognitive motivation to pay attention to the evidence beyond figures.

What is new: For people like me, who grew up on the OD masters of the 60 - 70s such as Beckhard and Harris, Schein, and so forth,there is nothing new. However the packaging of a well trodden message of what is required to create the motivation to change is worth a mark.

Any weakness: Yes, I thought that the Heaths run a danger of contradicting themselves when they use catchy but lasting messages such as "what looks like a people problem may be a situation problem" and then go on to say that "for every one to change someone has to act differently" thus putting emphasis on people rather than situations. This potential contradiction also appears in another appealing message namely: "People become exhausted trying to implement change" again returning to people rather than to situations. Switch as a "quickie" is worth reading and keeping for some time. For teaching the fundamentals of change, I still find the OD masters a good starting point.
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From the United States

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4.0 out of 5 stars Switch Deficiencies and Recommendations
Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2010
Verified Purchase
Switch is a book Josef Goebbels, Adolf Hitler's Minister of Propaganda, would rate with five stars. Goebbels's Principles of Propaganda, just like the Switch change framework (Direct the Rider, Motivate the Elephant, and Shape the Path) excises Values and Goal Setting from Change. What remains is a set of tactics Switch identifies to realize change no matter what goals and values the leaders want to achieve and realize. Although the change framework in Switch potentially provides powerful tactics for change, Switch has some major and fatal deficiencies.

The framework with its tactics for change described in SWITCH - HOW TO CHANGE THINGS WHEN CHANGE IS HARD by Chip Heath and Dan Heath published by Broadway Books, New York 2010 has some major and fatal deficiencies. (I will use the term "change framework" as a convenient way to refer to the Switch framework and tactics for change described in this book.)

The change framework
* Is amoral and value neutral,
* Is dangerous and provides a potentially powerful means for propaganda,
* Discounts reason and is inconsistent with its formulation,
* Can be used to establish and sustain totalitarianism, potentially resulting in holocausts,
* Is missing the ethical compass, the Superego from Freud's standpoint, and
* Is inimical to democracy and potentially supportive of totalitarianism

It is recommended that the authors augment the book by providing a methodology for how members in a group can democratically formulate and support worthy goals to satisfy the critical and important needs of the group in a manner consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.

The change framework is amoral and value neutral. There is no discussion in Switch about what makes a goal desirable (e.g., using methods of Immanuel Kant, utilitarianism, or Sir William Walter Ross) and worthy of attainment in the context of the ethical values. There is no discussion on how to identify goals that are worthy of attainment in the context of these ethical values and real needs. In the wrong hands, it could be used as an effective recipe for despotism. The goals are critically important.

The change framework is dangerous and provides a potentially powerful means for propaganda. The framework may be extremely dangerous if effective. It is like giving a loaded gun with instructions on how to effectively use it without providing the user advice on the ethical use of the gun, e.g., under what (very restricted) conditions (e.g., target practice and self-defense), it is ethically permissible to use it.

Without the moral compass, Switch provides a simple framework for propaganda, which consists of tactics aimed at influencing or manipulating attitudes and behaviors of an individual or a community to help realize one or more goals. Many of the tactics identified in Switch are similar to those proposed by Goebbels and other advocates of propaganda. See [...]The change framework discounts reason and is inconsistent with its formulation. The framework explicitly discounts reason. The framework explicitly discounts reason by asserting that the Rider will think in "True But Useless" (TBU) circles if not given direction. It claims that the Rider will not be able to set the direction if the Elephant opposes the rider`s direction. But isn't the change framework itself a rational mechanism that the Rider can use to nudge or coax the Elephant to move in the direction that Rider chooses? Even though the framework explicitly discounts reason, it provides the Rider (the intellect) the means by which to influence the elephant. Therefore, the change framework enables the intellect and reason to greatly influence if not control the emotions of the Elephant.

If the intellect and reason are really as Switch portrays, how did the change framework become articulated, presented, and communicated? The Rider as described in the Switch could not have formulated the change framework. It would simply think in circles (TBU). In Switch, the Leader when equipped with the framework and tactics for change is the agent of change.

The framework and tactics for change must have been created by a series of clever Riders, don't you think? The Elephant didn't create the change framework. Overtime, the authors of propaganda and change literature, including the books referenced in "Recommendations for Additional Reading," accumulated knowledge that the Switch authors synthesized into this very powerful change framework. The Rider is not the weak analyzer Switch would have you believe. Riders created the change framework that enable the Rider some level of mastery over the Elephant. Reason created the change framework. Therefore, reason and the Rider are of paramount importance.

The change framework can used to establish and sustain totalitarianism, potentially resulting in holocausts. Switch pays little attention to the Leaders. But how does the Leader relate to the framework and the tactics for change? Who are the Leaders and what is their relationship to the Riders and Elephants? In the case of an individual, it is your reason equipped with the change framework. Generally, a Leader is a person (Rider/Elephant) who is expert in the change framework and who is in a leadership position of responsibility for a group of people or community to help the group or community satisfy some of its most important needs by applying the framework and tactics for change in a manner as consistent as possible with the prevailing and pluralistic ethical values of the members of the group or community. There should be much more discussion about Leaders and how they relate to the change framework. The last century should have taught us that unbridled reason (The Rider with propaganda) threatens to erupt in holocaust without an ethical compass.

The change framework is missing the ethical compass, the Superego from Freud's standpoint.
Freud (Beyond the Pleasure Principle 1920 and The Ego and the Id 1923) would have called the ethical compass, which is totally missing in the Switch, the Superego. He would have called the Elephant the Id and the Rider the Ego. The rational Ego attempts to resolve or at least mitigate the conflict between the Id (Elephant) and the Superego (the ethical compass). The change framework is a good means to help mitigate if not resolve this conflict.

Because there is no understanding of the connection between these tactics and worthy goals in the context of ethical values, Switch misses the opportunity to provide direction (to the Ego) on how identify the specific tactics for change that would be effective given the nature of the goals that ought be realized in the context of the ethical compass (Superego). The framework provides no methodology for the selection of specific tactics given worthy goals in the context of evolved ethical values.

The change framework is inimical to democracy and potentially supportive of totalitarianism. For a description of totalitarianism see [...]. How does the Switch framework with its leaders relate to a democratic society? The Switch encourages the Leaders to separate themselves from the other members of the group. The Leaders somehow determine the goals (the framework provides no guidance) and use the framework with its tactics for change to manipulate the other members of the group to realize the goals. There is no discussion of how the leaders formulate worthy goals that are consistent the leaders' group ethical values and genuine needs. This framework and its tactics for change can very easily be used to establish and sustain totalitarianism. The fatal flaw of the framework is the absence of an ethical component.

Some recommendations follow. The authors should augment the framework with an ethical compass. They should provide advice and methods to discover the prevailing and pluralistic values of the group. They should provide advice to the members of the group on how to democratically identify the critical and important needs of the group in the context of the group's prevailing pluralistic values. They should provide a methodology for how members in a group can democratically formulate worthy goals in the context of the group's prevailing pluralistic values to satisfy the critical and important needs of the group in a manner consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.

With the satisfaction of these recommendations, Switch can be transformed from a potentially dangerous amoral change framework into an ethically directed and integrated framework for change that helps satisfy real needs using tactics for change that are consistent with the group's prevailing pluralistic values.
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Shane McGowen
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Book
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2023
Verified Purchase
It has a lot of good examples of how to implement change, and it's worth the read. I like the way it breaks down change into 3 main ideas.
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Alan McComas
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Framework wrapped in an unfortunate metaphor
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2013
Verified Purchase
This would be a GREAT book. The framework and essential ideas are a very helpful way to think about change. However, they use a single metaphor and then carry it through the whole book. If only they ad presented the metaphor and then left it alone. I dislike the "elephant" and "rider" metaphor a lot - so it's constant use becomes annoying. I disagree with the premise that our "logical" mind is "supposed" to be able to override our emotional selves. We aren't designed to be "ruled" by logic - we are designed to cooperate with ourselves. We have internal checks and balances that work together to keep us safe. They eventually actually make the point that logic is actually designed to SERVE emotion, not rule it. So why do they overemphasize this metaphor that doesn't even really portray their real point? And then use it ad nauseum? Why not just say that we must integrate and align our head, hearts, and bodies and work with the natural change process to get the best results. Lots of other metaphors work to describe the inner leadership and collaboration required to change ourselves intentionally.

Once I got past the metaphor - I discovered several great ideas and terms that have been helpful in teaching clients how to "lead" and facilitate their own personal growth and change initiatives instead of trying to control change. Favorite ideas:

- Look for the bright spots - learn from your own life.

Look for small examples where you are already doing what you want to do more of. Look for what works and what doesn't, what helps and what doesn't. I find all change efforts benefit greatly from focusing more on what *is* working than on what isn't working. ALL the available feedback is helpful if is *descriptive* rather than *judged* as good or bad. Feedback from what you do when you succeed can be used to redesign your strategy to fit you and your situation in areas where you are challenged. For example, if you are often late, focus on the bright spots - the examples of where you *are* on time. How do you do that? Use that to feed your creativity and design solutions for being on time more often. (I call this agilizing change.)

- Love this quote " What looks like resistance is often a lack of clarity"

YES! Need to get small and specific. I would also add that resistance is also often a sign of using strategies that don't fit the situation, the person, the timing, or the resources available. In my world resistance is incredibly valuable feedback for redesigning your approach and successfully leading change.

- Love the languaging of "Shape" the path.

You really can't "control" or "direct" change - if you work with the natural principles of how things and people organically change you will find that shaping is a far superior and more effective strategy.

Overally, the model is a simple, straightforward framework that works better than most as a primer for people new to leading change. I found that with a little tweaking and using my own metaphors (based on agile mindset, and iterative, organic, systems design thinking) I was able to enhance and simplify my own Agilizen Designing for Change model making it easier to learn.

This book is definitely worth reading by anyone who helps others change or is highly motivated to facilitate their own personal growth.
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Bob
4.0 out of 5 stars Overall it has good content, but some oft-repeated examples contradict message
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2014
Verified Purchase
The author does a good job of presenting some research and anecdotal evidence for not only the sources of paralysis, but solutions that have worked in the past to effect change. And the methods seem to have broad applicability, which is even better.

However, I will point out one example that is repeated quite often that although looks good on the surface is actually an example of what NOT to do, according to the author's thesis. One of the basis tenants that he presents is to Do What Works (aka "find the Bright Spot"), so that regardless of preconceived notions, the working examples are repeated. And, he clearly recommends that objective data be used to asses this measurement, such as the issue of malnutrition in Vietnam (looking for the healthy kids), or Bobbie, the problem child (looking for instances where he is well behaved). Most of the examples he presents show a comparison in the beginning of the desired outcome (healthier children), FINDING the differences between those instances where the desired outcome is present, and those where the desired outcome is lacking. Then implementing the changes that work and then measuring over time to verify that the correct changes were made.

Okay, the example where this fails is the case of the researchers trying to get Americans to eat a healthier diet. Now, the objective measure here would be markers of health (just like the marker of the more active, less sick, and less emaciated looking children in Vietnam, or the marker of when the problem child was behaving well). These markers of health could be things like triglyceride counts, or fasting glucose, or A1C. And the next step would be to find out what the healthier people are doing differently than the unhealthy people. However, the researchers were not interested in markers of health, they were interested in getting people to eat a specific diet - regardless of the science (or lack thereof) supporting the dietary changes, and regardless of how or even if the health of the participants changed. The did not test what was working for the healthiest individuals, and they did not measure markers of health before and after. They only measured compliance with their approved diet - which included switching whole milk for 1% milk. Unfortunately for them, no controlled studies have shown improved health by drinking lower fat milk. In fact, many studies have shown the opposite.

This attempt at directing the method, and not the outcome, is the antithesis of the recommendations in the book. If the reader can ignore these misguided examples (that are sadly, quite often repeated) the message will be much clearer and stronger. Again, find what works and replicate that.
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Harish Nair
4.0 out of 5 stars Focus on situation and not people
Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2015
Verified Purchase
This book is a summarization of the various theories of change management, be it in a business, government or NGO.

Dan and Chip talk about most of the problem being with situation and not with people as most of us would jump to conclusion. So, we end up struggling about getting people to behave in a new way. The corollary they draw to most people welcoming seismic changes like marriage and babies in their lives is quite an eye opener in this regard. So, if the behavior needs to change, there has to be a change in the situation.

The Elephant and Rider synonyms for the two minds in one brain was very innovative and interesting. This tells a lot and the authors uses these synonyms extensively through out the book. For instance while I knew that will power wears out after some usage and thus exhaustion becomes perceived as laziness, but with an Elephant and Rider context, it becomes very apparent.

It is not that all the concepts in this book are new, at I have been exposed to some of these like shrinking the change or lowering the bar in some other books and also in practical life. But then to be fair, the authors themselves claim to have referred to tons of book on change and have also recommended a few of them for additional reading. Still, I liked this book because it gave a different context to the various approached, but kept the impact on Elephant and Rider throughout each approaches. Thus it makes it easier to identify which approach works best in which case. And the cases are quite diverse, even a case of organizing the community to save a city or a parrot for that matter!!

Another innovative feature of this book was the clinics Dan and Chip give. It provides the reader an opportunity to try out the approaches and the impact of the same. I liked it a lot.

I had some disagreement on the mindset concept or to be more specific the wordings of the four question used to identify the mindset. Actually, I don’t believe in mindset and always felt it as all about conditioning

If you are one of those who are driving change in your place and losing steam, do read this book. It will tell you that yes, everything can look like a failure in the middle. But with if the Rider has the necessary direction (very important, ambiguity does not help to change) and the Elephant is well motivated, you will still reach the destination. After all , as Dan and Chip say, change is not an event, it a process.
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Brenda M. Michelson
4.0 out of 5 stars Switch is not your typical change management tome. There's no 10-Step Plan or Come-to-Consensus moment.
Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2010
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Switch is not your typical change management tome. There's no 10-Step Plan or Come-to-Consensus moment. Instead, the Heath brothers present a clear 3-part framework based on scientific research of how the human brain works. In short, the framework advocates appealing to individual's rational (Rider) and emotional (Elephant) sides, and shaping the change path.

The book is broken into three sections - Direct the Rider, Motivate the Elephant and Shape the Path. Consistent with their earlier book, Made to Stick, and their Fast Company column, Switch is replete with real-world anecdotes about identifying, motivating and executing difficult changes.

One story that stuck out for me was Jerry Sternin's work in 1990 with Save the Children in Vietnam. Save the Children was invited to Vietnam to combat malnutrition. However, when Sternin arrived, he was given "six months to make a difference". This deadline made the research Sternin collected on malnutrition root causes -- poverty, lack of clean water, poor sanitation and nutrition ignorance -- "true but useless" (TBU).

Sternin didn't have the time or money to address the underlying issues. He needed to identify a more direct way to make a difference. Forgoing the typical "focus on the problem" route, Sternin set out in search of bright spots. Sternin sought out well-nourished village children to learn how they defied the odds. Once identified, Sternin studied how these homes varied from the norm, on the lookout for deviations related to nutrition. Through observation, Sternin was able to identify differences in what and how the well-nourished children were fed.

Instead of issuing a proclamation of his findings, Sternin created a change path. Sternin instituted a mothers-teaching-mothers community program to change feeding habits. Making these seemingly small adjustments - number of meals per day, individual servings, sweet potato green and shrimp supplements to rice -- dramatically improved childhood nutrition in the studied villages, and then spread throughout the country, eventually reaching 2.2 million people in 265 villages.

Besides the humanitarian aspect, what appealed to me about Sternin's story was the problem solving technique. Instead of getting lost in "true but useless" (analysis-paralysis) Sternin identified and exploited bright spots. In a later example, a similar technique is described as Appreciative Inquiry.

Reading Switch, I picked up techniques related to change and solving hard problems. The latter was a pleasant surprise for me. If your work involves change, hard problems or the combination, I highly recommend Switch.
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Baobh
4.0 out of 5 stars Powerful tools - like chainsaws in the wrong hands, can be deadly
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2012
Verified Purchase
This book offers a number of powerful behavioral tools to use in difficult situations. Several reviewers touch on the strong points of this book already. I concur with almost everything good that's been written about this book. One of the strengths of this book is the interplay between stories, discussion of science, and "clinics" where the reader is invited to go along and try to solve, with the authors, the protagonist's problems. Using a behavioral approach does indeed lead to significant changes. For a couple stuck in a negative rut this book would be great. Women suffering from domestic violence who find it very hard to leave the abuser, on the other hand, could find the wrong kind of encouragement in this book. It is precisely because they focus on the "bright spots" that they stay, often with fatal results.

Then there is the guy who used drugs in Viet Nam and to use the language of the 12 step movement, when he comes home, he essentially pulls a "geographic". People who's drug abuse falls away as easily as is described here are not addicts. Addiction is a brain disease. Animals who are addicted will die of thirst with free access to water because they can only access either the drug or water not both. Those suffering from real addictions are not helped by looking at the bright spots, tweaking the environment or even pulling a geographic. Attention to people places and things are definitely part of recovery. But before the problem can be addressed, it must be admitted. Half measures are of no avail. Too often have I seen the parents and spouses and children tormented with false and toxic hope to let this one pass without a comment. Nor are most are not helped by an incremental approach. There is a caution that these approaches might not be enough for teens addicted to nicotine. This of course carries the implication that the approaches described might work in adults suffering from nicotine or other addictions.

The authors are making their sales pitch so emphasis is not placed on cautions or concerns. The caution needs to be louder and clearer. The authors don't want us all to leave thinking this book solves all problems and if it doesn't its because it was misapplied do they?
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Cristian Guajardo Garcia
4.0 out of 5 stars Switch, review en español
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2010
Verified Purchase
El otro día compre el libro Re-Work de Jason Fried y David Heinemeier Hansson. Amazon, como me conoce tan bien, me ofreció "Switch" de los hermanos Heath en un trato muy seductor como para negarme.

Cuento corto, leí primero "Switch" y les vengo a contar de que trata.

"Switch" parte de la premisa que siempre es difícil cambiar si no tenemos las condiciones necesarias para propiciar aquel cambio. No sólo en nuestras vidas, sino dentro de nuestra comunidad o en nuestro trabajo. El conflicto principal -de acuerdo a los Heath - radica en un conflicto que se genera en nuestros cerebros: Ahí hay dos lados, el racional (elefante) y el analítico (el jinete). Cada uno se encarga de distintas funciones y potencia (o restringe) cambios en nuestra vida.

El mérito del libro, radica en explicar como personas comunes y corrientes pueden aplicar principios muy sencillos para gatillar cambios profundos.

Duplica los puntos altos: En los procesos, siempre pasa algo bueno. Identifícalo y haz que vuelva a suceder. Clona los puntos altos.
Crea una postal del futuro: Establece una meta clara, y haz lo que tengas que hacer para llegar ahí.
Fragmenta el problema: No lo abordes todo desde un principio. Plantea metas pequeñas y trabaja sobre cada una.
Construye hábitos: Trata de mantener una rutina que te permita estandarizar procesos complejos para ti. De un momento a otro, debieses poder lidiar con ellos de manera natural.
Viraliza el cambio: Las costumbres se aprenden y se imitan de acuerdo a lo que sucede dentro de la tribu; por lo tanto, tú puedes generar el cambio.

Insisto, lo mejor del libro es como aborda procesos bastante sencillos y lógicos pero en los cuales no pensamos nunca. Por ejemplo, yo siempre he sido partidario de "quebrar" los problemas grandes en varios menores. Así empiezo a moverme y tengo la sensación de avance. Sin embargo me percato que muchas personas a mi alrededor no tienen noción del poder que sus mentes tienen para cambiar ciertas cosas.

Si no han sido capaces de mantener las resoluciones de año nuevo, es culpa del elefante quien domina la constante lucha con el jinete (quien fue el de la idea de tener resoluciones).

"Switch" es un gran libro para inspirarse y de paso, decidirse a dejar de decir para comenzar a hacer.
PEACE OUT
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curtismchale
4.0 out of 5 stars Great read to learn how to make changes when it's hard
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2015
Verified Purchase
Ever want to loose weight and you’re like me you love chocolate chip cookies? You love them so much that your 4 year old calls you the cookie monster.

Are you responsible for some change in your company but don’t really have the power to make that change? Maybe you’re in charge but the entrenched ethic/patterns are totally contrary to the change that needs to be made?

This is the book for you.

Chip and Dan Heath explore how many organizations made the Rider (our thinking brain) and the Elephant (our feeling brain) both adopt a change. You’ll see this 2 brain thinking explored in other books like Thinking, Fast and Slow.

In Switch Chip and Dan assert that our Rider is going to generally go where the Elephant wants to. With great effort it can overpower the Elephant for a short time (like when I swear off cookies) but eventually the much more powerful Elephant will win as the Rider gets tired.

Switch doesn’t claim to give you all the answers to make effective change at your organization, it does give you lots of great stories and examples of how others made change and then pulls out practical application you can use to help make changes in your organization.

One of the best takeaways is to make change easy. Don’t give a big overarching change policy. Give clear concise easy to carry out directions. If you’re looking to cut short term costs because you have no money maybe that direction is “We’ll always choose the cheapest option even if the long term cost is more”.

With that direction all purchasers have a clear direction when making any purchasing decision.

There are many more great takeaways in Switch and I highly recommend you read it.
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Robert T. Hess
4.0 out of 5 stars Switch
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2011
Verified Purchase
Yes it is good. The hype is worth it. To be honest, I wasn't expecting very much. I am not usually a sucker for pop culture books, but this one is got my attention early. Filled with compelling stories to illustrate their theory, Switch delivers. The point of the book is the study of change, and how to make sweeping or simple changes in your own life or that of your business or organization.

Obviously, In the world of education reform, there are many applications because the present public education system is built on established and traditional ways of thinking.

The Switch theory is pretty straight forward. Our brain has two battling components that determine how we act--our emotional brain and our rational brain. The emotional brain (symbolized by The Elephant) wants to do what it wants to do. It is known for energy, power and passion. Good stuff if you get it moving in the right direction. The rational brain (symbolized by The Rider) makes logical decisions based upon the data provided, but is often paralyzed by over analyzing things. Sometimes---many times---the Rider can't get the Elephant to go in the right direction (that's why you stay up messing around on Facebook for three hours when you should be doing your homework). The direction is known as The Path. And there you have it.

The book builds on this metaphor for change with compelling story after compelling story to illustrate the point. The key to transformation change is a combination of appealing to the reasonable of The Rider, motivating The Elephant, and shaping The Path to make it easier to travel. The rest is gravy (and easy to read, hard to put down). Highly recommend.
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