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Game-Changer  By  cover art

Game-Changer

By: David McAdams
Narrated by: Grover Gardner, David McAdams
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Publisher's summary

The aim of David McAdams’s Game-Changer is nothing less than to empower you with this wisdom - not just to win in every strategic situation (or “game”) you face but to change those games and the ecosystems in which they reside to transform your life and our lives together for the better.

Game-Changer develops six basic ways to change games—commitment, regulation, cartelization, retaliation, trust, and relationships—enlivened by countless colorful characters and unforgettable examples from the worlds of business, medicine, finance, military history, crime, sports, and more.

The book then digs into several real-world strategic challenges, such as how to keep prices low on the Internet, how to restore the public’s lost trust in for-charity telemarketers, and even how to save mankind from looming and seemingly unstoppable drug-resistant disease. In each case, McAdams uses the game-theory approach developed in the book to identify the strategic crux of the problem and then leverages that “game-awareness” to brainstorm ways to change the game to solve or at least mitigate the underlying problem.

So get ready for a fascinating journey. You’ll emerge a deeper strategic thinker, poised to change and win all the games you play. In doing so, you can also make the world a better place. “Just one Game-Changer [is] enough to seed and transform an entire organization into a more productive, happier, and altogether better place,” McAdams writes. Just imagine what we can do together.

©2014 David McAdams (P)2014 Gildan Media LLC

Critic reviews

“David McAdams’s Game-Changer is a rare book: A nontechnical first introduction to game theory that also offers a fresh perspective, on how the best strategy for playing a game can often be to change the rules. I can see that I’ll have lots of opportunities to recommend it.” (Alvin E. Roth, winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Economics)

What listeners say about Game-Changer

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Very good and the only content

I'm very pleased with how this book turned out especially since it's the only one I could find.

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Real World Applications

I really enjoyed the tie in to financial markets and addiction. Other topics were discussed but I did not find them as engaging.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Wanted it to be good

I was really hoping this was going to be good. However the author goes down these rabbit holes for half an hour and then tells you to refer to 3 chapters back to understand the point trying to be conveyed. Meanwhile the half hour just spent was mostly worthless. There is good information in here but you have to put it together yourself.

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4 people found this helpful

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Great

Definitely a book needing a few listens to truly understand everything. However I highly suggest this.

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1 person found this helpful

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very useful book!

Great details and descriptions goes into the book for examples of game situations. Author's voice is a bit weak and hard to hear. But the rest if the biok is fine. Great read!

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5 people found this helpful

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Good read

learned a lot on strategy and decision making. must for any ceo or businessman. simplifies complex situations

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1 person found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars

Interesting but not gripping

There is a decent overview of game theory in this book. However, the content becomes extremely tangential and I even forgot several times that I was listening to a book about game theory at all. The author clearly did a lot of research (even toots his own horn at the end of the book about it), but failed to leave out any unnecessary information in the text so as not to lose the reader (listener). In short, while the language of the book is certainly written for the layperson. The format is akin to that of a scientific research paper and is a little (lot) boring.

The narrator did not help things. I may enjoy this narrator for a novel of some kind, but for this type of book his tone bored me to sleep. He did not have that knack for making the material exciting and interesting.

Another small point - and this may be more related to my inaccurate expectations, but worth mentioning for others - is that this book does not really talk about how to strategize within the confines of a typical issue - such as how to navigate a prisoners dilemma type situation. There is more examples on how to introduce regulation or something that removes the elements of the prisoner's dilemma type situation. Not actually what I was looking for. I was hoping to learn about anticipating other people's moves and so on. Again, my incorrect assumptions don't make the book bad, but might be useful for anyone looking for something similar to what I was (am) looking for.

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9 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars

Interesting listen yet little practical value

It reads like an interesting book about game theory with a number of interesting examples but I found this 'game theory' to be common sense or basic strategy applied using complex-sounding logic.

The examples are lengthy and go off topic for long periods of time. I think one chapter spends thirty minutes talking about bacteria and viruses with no relation to game theory in an example that is way too complicated and has little to do with the topic.

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5 people found this helpful

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Excellent Social Applications of Game Theory!

Book contains an assortment of relevant exampkes of game strategies in real life settings. I found it a helpful source to augment learning about the traditinal mathematical model/s.

Perhaps a shortcoming was that I would have liked linkage of the scenarios to math models. Without the linkage, the reading awareness was reduced to anecdotal descriptions that provide minimal guidance to a reader seeking knowledge beyond precursory mentions. Overall, the book presented an excelllent concept.

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3 people found this helpful

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It may sound trite, but the central message of this book is to think outside the box

An entertaining and surprisingly light introduction to game theory, which teaches us that, by treating difficult situations as games, we can better understand them, and that, by tweaking the rules of the game or acting outside the percei

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