Test Special Issue

Game Change

Do elite athletes really make elite employees?

Sports, we tend to assume, offer a sharp-edged reflection of business life in microcosm — leadership under pressure, the winning mentality, valuable lessons drawn from loss. It’s all there. Just kick back with a beer and a pizza and watch your pathway to workplace success unfold on game day. Well, it turns out that the connections are often far more nuanced than we might have presumed. Do elite athletes really make elite employees? What’s the connection between Swedish pragmatics in soccer and a thriving startup culture? Have you factored in the difference between “wicked” and “kind” environments (and what does that even mean)? We investigate all of these pivotal tangents, and much more, in this Big Think special collection of essays, interviews, and curated book excerpts. Forget everything you’ve been told about the synergies between sports and business. It’s time to rewrite the rules.

Blue background with the words "Game Change" in white, surrounded by strategic game symbols and graphs in the background.
Presented by
John Templeton Foundation
Democracy by soundbite is not democracy, says Alan Dershowitz.
1mins
Though there is great leadership in business, there is a severe shortage in governments the world over.
2mins
Even tyrants know that civilized society needs law.
1mins
The volatile mix of poverty and fundamentalism.
3mins
Dershowitz talks of the need for a Continuum of Civilianality.
1mins
Alan Dershowitz on regulating beatings and waterboarding.
1mins
Can we hold people? And for how long can we hold them? And under what circumstances can we hold them because we strongly suspect that they are planning to do […]
Dershowitz wishes academics would go back to first principles.
Everybody should be subject to one standard, Alan Dershowitz says.
4mins
Homo sapiens are more used to living without the law than with the law.
1mins
Alan Dershowitz discusses growing up Jewish in America during the period of the second World War.
5mins
Give people more of a stake in the success of the global economy.
2mins
Things would look a lot rosier if people with big ideas went into politics.
3mins
The myth of the hereafter, Alan Dershowitz says, is one of the worst ideas humans have ever created.
6mins
Everything needs a jurisprudence.
6mins
A Jewish boy with the head of Webster and a head of clay.
4mins
Dershowitz finds his inspiration anywhere and everywhere he can.