Curious Minds at Work cover logo
RSS Feed Apple Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts
English
Non-explicit
gayleallen.net
4.70 stars
42:03

Curious Minds at Work

by Gayle Allen

Want to get better at work? At managing others? Managing yourself? Gayle Allen interviews experts who take your performance to the next level. Each episode features a book with insights to help you achieve your goals.

Copyright: © Curious Minds at Work

Episodes

CM 008: Mona Patel on What Drives Great Design

24m · Published 23 Nov 08:05
Design thinking and creativity are like muscles: we all have them, but they are more useful when they are strengthened! In this bestselling book Reframe: Shift the Way You Work, Innovate, and Think, Mona Patel gives you the perfect exercises for your design workout, giving you the tools you need to unleash your inner designer. Mona is a regular contributor to Fast Company, Time Magazine, and Forbes, and she is the founder and CEO of Motivate Design. Mona is also an adjunct professor at Parsons School of Design.In this episode, she explains the ways design thinking informs her life and her work, and she shares some of the strategies she uses with friends, family, colleagues, and clients. In addition, you will learn: how to unleash your creativity through design thinking why everyone can be creative creative openers you can use with your teams questions that actually limit our creativity how to push people to create something better without making them feel bad the most important question for designing solutions which assumptions hold us back what it is like to be a woman of color leading a design company the power of a design-centered culture in the workplace If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links Four-C Model of Creativity by James Kaufman and Ronald Beghetto TEDx Talk by Mona Patel Ethnography Kodak Excuse Personas White Space Project Greenlight Human-centered Design Woman and Minority Owned Business Maslow Hierarchy of Needs

CM 007: Janice Kaplan on How Gratitude Changes Your Life

29m · Published 16 Nov 08:05
What happens when you dedicate a year of your life to practicing gratitude? Maybe everything. In this groundbreaking new book, The Gratitude Diaries: How a Year Looking on the Bright Side Can Transform Your Life, Janice Kaplan explains the science behind the power of gratitude. The author of twelve books, including The New York Times bestselling memoir, I will See you Again, Janice was an award-winning producer at ABC-TV Good Morning America, Executive Producer of the TV Guide Television Group, and Editor-in-Chief of Parade Magazine. In this episode, Janice explains the surprising, counterintuitive connection between gratitude and happiness. She also shares simple steps we can take today to increase the amount of gratitude we express and how doing it can change your life. In this episode, you will learn: how a mindset of gratitude gives us control over our own happiness simple steps you can take to express gratitude right now with family and friends the mental and physical health benefits of practicing gratitude the connection between gratitude and experiences over stuff the importance of gratitude at work, and how it can drive purpose and ambition how gratitude gets us beyond the comparison game the differences between intentional and reactive gratitude how gratitude plays an important role in rebounding from life tragedies the power of a gratitude diet how we have so much more control over our happiness than we think If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links John Templeton Foundation National Gratitude Survey TSA Habituation Massachusetts General Hospital Tom Gilovich Paul Piff Monopoly game Daniel Gilbert David Steindl Rast

CM 007: Janice Kaplan on How Gratitude Changes Your Life

29m · Published 16 Nov 08:05
What happens when you dedicate a year of your life to practicing gratitude? Maybe everything. In this groundbreaking new book, The Gratitude Diaries: How a Year Looking on the Bright Side Can Transform Your Life, Janice Kaplan explains the science behind the power of gratitude. The author of twelve books, including The New York Times bestselling memoir, I will See you Again, Janice was an award-winning producer at ABC-TV Good Morning America, Executive Producer of the TV Guide Television Group, and Editor-in-Chief of Parade Magazine. In this episode, Janice explains the surprising, counterintuitive connection between gratitude and happiness. She also shares simple steps we can take today to increase the amount of gratitude we express and how doing it can change your life. In this episode, you will learn: how a mindset of gratitude gives us control over our own happiness simple steps you can take to express gratitude right now with family and friends the mental and physical health benefits of practicing gratitude the connection between gratitude and experiences over stuff the importance of gratitude at work, and how it can drive purpose and ambition how gratitude gets us beyond the comparison game the differences between intentional and reactive gratitude how gratitude plays an important role in rebounding from life tragedies the power of a gratitude diet how we have so much more control over our happiness than we think If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links John Templeton Foundation National Gratitude Survey TSA Habituation Massachusetts General Hospital Tom Gilovich Paul Piff Monopoly game Daniel Gilbert David Steindl Rast

CM 006: Mick Ebeling on How to Achieve the Impossible

32m · Published 09 Nov 08:05
Mick Ebeling is the Founder of Not Impossible Labs, an online crowdsourcing platform that dramatically improves the lives of millions by creating low-cost, open-source, and do-it-yourself devices. For example, through a combination of marking and hacking, Not Impossible Labs developed 150-dollar devices that helped people with ALS communicate with loved ones for the first time in years, as well as prosthetic limbs for Sudanese children for as low as 50 dollars. The philosophy of Not Impossible Labs is to help one to help many, that is, to create a life-changing solution for one person, and then think about how to scale it. He describes these innovations in the bestselling book Not Impossible: The Art and Joy of Doing What Could Not Be Done. Mick was deemed one of the Top 50 Most Creative People in 2014 by Advertising Age. He was also the recipient of the 2014 Muhammad Ali Humanitarian of the Year Award. In this interview, he shares the circumstances that launched Not Impossible Labs and that led to his book. He talks about the people whose problems he committed to solve and the hacking, making and do-it-yourself approaches he and his fellow innovators used to do just that. In this episode, you will learn: how to commit first to achieve the impossible how a 150-dollar EyeWriter helped a renowned artist with ALS draw again how 3D printers revolutionized life for Sudanese youth the importance of making and hacking for solving real-world problems how to empower young people to embrace a Not Impossible mindset how seeking solutions helps us make creative connections Mick also shares several of the new projects his organization has underway, and he talks about ways Not Impossible Labs is bridging the gap between makers and problem solvers. If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links Mick Ebeling TED Talk Street Art Tony Tempt One Quan Tempt One Foundation Stephen Hawking Time Magazine Top 25 Inventions MoMA EyeWriter Optical character technology Open source The BrainWriter Cameron Rodriguez ALS or Lou Gehrig Disease Triangulation Consumer EEG Devices Project Daniel Dr. Tom Catena Precipart Richard Van As Gait Trainer

CM 006: Mick Ebeling on How to Achieve the Impossible

32m · Published 09 Nov 08:05
Mick Ebeling is the Founder of Not Impossible Labs, an online crowdsourcing platform that dramatically improves the lives of millions by creating low-cost, open-source, and do-it-yourself devices. For example, through a combination of marking and hacking, Not Impossible Labs developed 150-dollar devices that helped people with ALS communicate with loved ones for the first time in years, as well as prosthetic limbs for Sudanese children for as low as 50 dollars. The philosophy of Not Impossible Labs is to help one to help many, that is, to create a life-changing solution for one person, and then think about how to scale it. He describes these innovations in the bestselling book Not Impossible: The Art and Joy of Doing What Could Not Be Done. Mick was deemed one of the Top 50 Most Creative People in 2014 by Advertising Age. He was also the recipient of the 2014 Muhammad Ali Humanitarian of the Year Award. In this interview, he shares the circumstances that launched Not Impossible Labs and that led to his book. He talks about the people whose problems he committed to solve and the hacking, making and do-it-yourself approaches he and his fellow innovators used to do just that. In this episode, you will learn: how to commit first to achieve the impossible how a 150-dollar EyeWriter helped a renowned artist with ALS draw again how 3D printers revolutionized life for Sudanese youth the importance of making and hacking for solving real-world problems how to empower young people to embrace a Not Impossible mindset how seeking solutions helps us make creative connections Mick also shares several of the new projects his organization has underway, and he talks about ways Not Impossible Labs is bridging the gap between makers and problem solvers. If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links Mick Ebeling TED Talk Street Art Tony Tempt One Quan Tempt One Foundation Stephen Hawking Time Magazine Top 25 Inventions MoMA EyeWriter Optical character technology Open source The BrainWriter Cameron Rodriguez ALS or Lou Gehrig Disease Triangulation Consumer EEG Devices Project Daniel Dr. Tom Catena Precipart Richard Van As Gait Trainer

CM 005: Nir Eyal on Rethinking Our Online Habits

37m · Published 02 Nov 08:10
Nir Eyal is the bestselling author of Hooked and acontributing writer for Forbes, TechCrunch, and Psychology Today. An entrepreneur, educator, and speaker, Nir writes about innovations at the intersection of psychology, technology, and business. In this interview, Nir shares the psychology behind why we get hooked by our devices and apps. He talks about how product designers use this knowledge to deliberately build certain features into their products, and he encourages us to use this knowledge to rethink our tech habits. In this episode, you will learn: the psychology that informs our technology habits the four key elements that make a technology product habit-forming the connection between emotion and our habits with tech what makes certain tech products are more sticky than others tips for what to do when tech becomes too addictive how we can use this technology to form good habits Nir also shares how what hooks us with tech can be used to improve the quality of our lives, especially when it comes to physical and mental health and wellness, and how he makes that the focus of his work today. If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links 7 Cups of Tea B. F. Skinner Operant Conditioning The IKEA effect Dan Ariely Michael Norton Robert Cialdini Foot in the Door Technique Cognitive Dissonance Marc Andreeson Getting Unhooked by Nir Eyal The Acceleration of Addictiveness by Paul Graham

CM 005: Nir Eyal on Rethinking Our Online Habits

37m · Published 02 Nov 08:10
Nir Eyal is the bestselling author of Hooked and acontributing writer for Forbes, TechCrunch, and Psychology Today. An entrepreneur, educator, and speaker, Nir writes about innovations at the intersection of psychology, technology, and business. In this interview, Nir shares the psychology behind why we get hooked by our devices and apps. He talks about how product designers use this knowledge to deliberately build certain features into their products, and he encourages us to use this knowledge to rethink our tech habits. In this episode, you will learn: the psychology that informs our technology habits the four key elements that make a technology product habit-forming the connection between emotion and our habits with tech what makes certain tech products are more sticky than others tips for what to do when tech becomes too addictive how we can use this technology to form good habits Nir also shares how what hooks us with tech can be used to improve the quality of our lives, especially when it comes to physical and mental health and wellness, and how he makes that the focus of his work today. If you enjoyed the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. Thanks for listening! Episode Links 7 Cups of Tea B. F. Skinner Operant Conditioning The IKEA effect Dan Ariely Michael Norton Robert Cialdini Foot in the Door Technique Cognitive Dissonance Marc Andreeson Getting Unhooked by Nir Eyal The Acceleration of Addictiveness by Paul Graham

CM 004: Wendy Suzuki on How Exercise Makes You Smarter

24m · Published 26 Oct 07:05
Wendy Suzuki is a Professor of Neural Science and Psychology at New York University. Wendy is an award-winning teacher and researcher, a TEDx speaker, and the author of the best-selling book Healthy Brain, Happy Life. While we have become more familiar with ways exercise can improve our body, Wendy helps us understand what it can do for our brain. She shares how exercise can improve our memories, our learning abilities, and our creativity. Things you will learn in this episode: how exercise can generate the kinds of brain cells we need the most the potential of exercise to disrupt how we age how to find a life-changing exercise regime what we are learning about mood, focus and attention in relation to exercise what movement can do for creativity and imagination why there is an urgency when it comes to exercise and our brains opportunities for thinking bigger when it comes to this kind of brain research Wendy also shares how her experience with exercise has influenced her teaching and her research focus. Episode Links Marian Diamond Intensati New York University Wendy Suzuki's Research Lab Transistor: A STEM Audio Project podcast If you enjoy the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes - your ratings make all the difference. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. As always, thanks for listening!

CM 004: Wendy Suzuki on How Exercise Makes You Smarter

24m · Published 26 Oct 07:05
Wendy Suzuki is a Professor of Neural Science and Psychology at New York University. Wendy is an award-winning teacher and researcher, a TEDx speaker, and the author of the best-selling book Healthy Brain, Happy Life. While we have become more familiar with ways exercise can improve our body, Wendy helps us understand what it can do for our brain. She shares how exercise can improve our memories, our learning abilities, and our creativity. Things you will learn in this episode: how exercise can generate the kinds of brain cells we need the most the potential of exercise to disrupt how we age how to find a life-changing exercise regime what we are learning about mood, focus and attention in relation to exercise what movement can do for creativity and imagination why there is an urgency when it comes to exercise and our brains opportunities for thinking bigger when it comes to this kind of brain research Wendy also shares how her experience with exercise has influenced her teaching and her research focus. Episode Links Marian Diamond Intensati New York University Wendy Suzuki's Research Lab Transistor: A STEM Audio Project podcast If you enjoy the podcast, please rate and review it on iTunes - your ratings make all the difference. For automatic delivery of new episodes, be sure to subscribe. As always, thanks for listening!

CM 003: Bernie Roth on How to Design a Life

33m · Published 17 Oct 23:34
Bernie Roth is a Professor of Engineering and the Academic Director and Co-founder of the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (the d.school) at Stanford University. A leader of international workshops on creativity and design thinking, Bernie is the author of the book, The Achievement Habit: Stop Wishing, Start Doing, and Take Command of Your Life. Bernie talks about what it means to apply design principles to create a life well lived. His focus is on personal transformation and empowerment. Things you will learn in this episode include: the importance of how we see the world the danger of having a reason for doing something how a bias toward action can overcome fear the answer to what is holding us back from learning, changing, and growing how methods for reframing and asking good questions can help us figure out the actual problems we are trying to solve ways to get unstuck how the language we use can empower or disempower us how teams and collaboration help us relate differently to one another and our work the shift of design thinking from object-centered to human-centered the origins and focus of his popular Designer in Society course for the d.school how much physical space influences our mindsets, our relationships, and the ways we work and collaborate Bernie also talks about how his work has changed the way he teaches. He is always striving to find ways to empower his students. As always, thanks for listening! If you enjoyed this episode, please share it using the social media buttons you see at the bottom of the post. Also, please leave a review of the Curious Minds podcast on iTunes. Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! I read every one of them. Please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Thanks! Episode Links Improv Wisdom by Patricia Ryan Madson Make Space by Scott Doorley and Scott Witthoft Designer in Society course The Human Potential Movement The Iceman Cometh by Eugene O’Neill

Curious Minds at Work has 385 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 269:54:20. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on August 4th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on May 26th, 2024 19:42.

Similar Podcasts

Every Podcast » Podcasts » Curious Minds at Work