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
1mins
Treat everyone as if they’re important.
2mins
“The Godfather” and Clint Eastwood.
3mins
The world continues to love our movies, even if they hate our foreign policy.
12mins
Melissa Chiu on Chinese art, before and after Tiananmen
1mins
A Kansan with a political future.
The War on Terror will be fought online.
10mins
Toward evidence-based spirituality. Transcript: I think it’s . . . I use the ecological model in understanding how wisdom traditions ought to work in the world today. And the ecological […]
9mins
Re-imagining Judaism. Transcript: Oh gosh. Well I’m sort of a futurist about religion and Judaism in the world. And I think about how to . . . I mean I […]
3mins
What’s the point of religion if there’s no one to deliver meals?
2mins
Participating in a period of amazing technological progress.
4mins
Mossberg recalls the assassinations of the late 1960s.
14mins
A country devoted to manufacturing produces artists that want nothing to do with it.
8mins
There used to be twelve daily mail deliveries in London. On horseback, of course.
7mins
Can the policies that worked for India work in Africa?