Praise for A PERFECT MESS
"A meandering, engaging tour of beneficial mess and the systems
and individuals reaping those benefits....A fine time tipping over
orthodoxies and poking fun at clutter busters and their ilk, and at the
self-help tips they live or die by."
"A meandering, engaging tour of beneficial mess and the systems
and individuals reaping those benefits....A fine time tipping over
orthodoxies and poking fun at clutter busters and their ilk, and at the
self-help tips they live or die by."
--The New York Times
A Perfect Mess is an engaging polemic against the neat-police who hold
so much sway over our lives. For all too many people, neatness is a
virtue in and of itself. The CEOs who appear on the cover of business
magazines inevitably gaze out at their conquered worlds from perfectly
neat offices with perfectly tidy desks. Americans pay millions of
dollars every year to neatness experts....There is more than a touch of
Calvinist severity about office managers everywhere, as they cast a
cold eye of suspicion on the untidy workers in their charge. Eric
Abrahamson and David Freedman note in "A Perfect Mess" that the costs
of being neat and well-organized frequently outweigh the benefits. If
this is true for mundane things like tidy desks, it is even truer with
big things like organizations. Businesses can become so focused on
transforming their internal processes into studies in neatness --
setting crystal-clear objectives (strategic planning) or removing
organizational clutter (re-engineering) -- that they forget to focus on
their real business. But Messrs. (as it is especially pleasing to call
them) Abrahamson and Freedman go on to make a larger claim: that mess
actually has its uses...."A Perfect Mess" is a godsend to anybody who
has a cleanliness fanatic for a boss....[and] for anyone who is already
finding it hard to keep a New Year's resolution about being tidier.
--The Wall Street Journal
"Combine the 'world-is-not-as-it-seems' mind-set of
Freakonomics with the delicious celebration of popular culture found in
Everything Bad is Good for You to get the cocktail-party-chatter-ready anecdotes of messiness leading to genius in
A Perfect Mess."
--Fast Company
"Written in the style of counterintuitive classics like
The Tipping Point and
Freakonomics,
A Perfect Mess
amounts to a big messy pile of evidence that in the grand scheme of
things, the advantages of neatness are often outweighed by the
costs....Citing case studies and entertaining anecdotes, the authors
[show] that a slightly messy way of doing things is more flexible,
efficient and likely to succeed in the real world than a tightly
regimented one."
--Forbes FYI
A treasure trove of stories and anecdotes about fascinating people who
have made their mark in business, science, medicine, technology, urban
planning, art and music in part by being what I'd call
idiosyncratically organized. From Alexander Fleming's fabled accidental
discovery of penicillin in his cluttered lab to J.S. Bach's
little-known propensity for rampant improvisation, the book overflows
with interesting details.... Abrahamson and Freedman are promoting the
concept that being flexibly organized is often more effective than
being rigidly organized in the linear, highly structured manner that
many people seem to believe is the “right” way to be
organized. Well, amen to that....The parts at which I laughed
most uncontrollably were their descriptions of what it was like hanging
out with professional organizers on the job and at a National
Association of Professional Organizers conference.
--Professional Organizer Harriet Schechter,
The San Diego Union-Tribune
Given the subject matter, it's appropriate that their investigation is -- ahem -- a mess. Luckily, as with
Freakonomics
and Gladwell's books, the attempt is both thought-provoking and
fun....For those whose eyes glaze over at management treatises,
fortunately
A Perfect Mess
unleashes, rather pell-mell, a muddle of other examples ranging far
beyond your cubicle -- freewheeling landscape design, electric shock
therapy treatments, noisy cell phone signals, tangled traffic patterns,
random urban planning, chaotic terrorist tactics and Surrealist art
movements....The book's peripatetic path eventually proves that despite
what your mother, your boss or your girlfriend tells you, a certain
amount of disorder is a good thing.
--The San Francisco Chronicle
Good news! Organization is overrated....The book is thought-provoking, well-organized, badly needed.
--The Los Angeles Times
As a devoted neatnik leading a scheduled and color-coded life, I expected to be annoyed by
A Perfect Mess.
By the end of the book, I not only had new respect for the rewards of
mess but also realized I could use a little more of it in my own
life....Makes for a fun read full of unexpected surprises.
--The Richmond Times-Dispatch
Maybe your mother was wrong to make you clean up your room?
A Perfect Mess
deflates the conventional wisdom that highly ordered systems are
automatically better....The bottom line of this highly engaging, often
funny book is that most of us have brains that are wired to react most
fruitfully to a certain degree of disorder—which explains why
some of us react so badly to people like Martha Stewart.
--The Very Short List
Eye-opening stories that challenge our obsession with an idealized version of home.
--The Dallas Morning News
An almost indecently fascinating book.
--The (U.K.) Guardian
This
engaging and surprisingly well-ordered book shows convincingly that a
little chaos is good for you....Covering topics ranging from why our
minds are built around disorder and how science is revealing that a
little disorder makes physical systems more productive, to the
aesthetics of mess (Ulysses is "a mess in almost every way that a book
can be a mess"), this is the perfect excuse to break that new year's
resolution to keep your desk tidy.
--The (U.K.) Guardian
A cross between
Blink and
Getting Things Done....A
great, provocative, counter-intuitive, and really enjoyable argument
about the benefits of mess and the costs of organization.
--800 CEO READ