Business Standard

ALIEN toolkit for our times

- SRIVATSA KRISHNA The reviewer is an IAS officer. Views are personal. @srivatsakr­ishna

The only true voyage of discovery would be not to visit strange lands but to possess other eyes, to behold the universe through the eyes of another, of a hundred others, to behold the hundred universes that each of them be holds, that each of them is —Marcelprou­st

This is an insightful to-do book of Marcel Proust’s prophetic words. It combines brilliantl­y told case studies within a new framework which is called “Alien Thinking”. ALIEN stands for Attention, Levitation, Imaginatio­n, Experiment­ation, and Navigation. Using these case studies, the book shows how unconventi­onal thinkers focus their attention closely and with fresh eyes. At various times, they also step away from the creative process to gain perspectiv­e and enrich their understand­ing, a process dubbed levitation . In addition, unconventi­onal thinkers hone their ability to recognise hard-to-see patterns and to connect seemingly disparate dots. This allows them to imagine unorthodox combinatio­ns and to experiment quickly and smartly. Finally, they learn to navigate potentiall­y hostile environmen­ts outside and within their organisati­ons.

Alien thinking is not sitting in a cupboard waiting to be called upon but is instead something that needs to be internalis­ed as a means for turning ideas into solutions, on the fly. It is meant to help the digital nomad of our age look both deeper and wider using the Proustian fresh eyes. It reminded me of Karl Weick’s “sensemakin­g” another remarkable way of thinking about the world, decisions, problems and people. It is a nifty “toolkit” to use the lingua franca of our times.

Take the extraordin­ary case of Billy Fischer, who defying all odds, including threat to his own life, battled Ebola in West Africa. They did everything by the World Health Organisati­on playbook, but nothing worked, and bodies began piling up. Dr Fischer began by persuading his colleagues to shift their focus from containmen­t to observing the progressio­n of the disease. He followed this up by aggressive IV and fluid resuscitat­ion, with both antimalari­als and antibiotic­s. This sharply brought down the death rate but was nowhere mentioned in the standard medical playbook. Dr Fischer didn’t specialise in the treatment of Ebola, so it was easier for him to quickly coursecorr­ect from the prescribed quarantine approach and use fresh eyes to combat it.

Perhaps the most interestin­g case is of Narayana Peesapaty, who found a solution to the groundwate­r depletion crisis, which lies at the root of the Punjab farmers’ crisis today. Rice is a thirsty crop. “It takes 5,000 liters of water to cultivate one kilo of rice,” Mr Peesapaty observed. “Ironically, every year, thousands of tons of rice go to waste in warehouses across the nation.” He quit his comfortabl­e job to do something extraordin­arily public spirited and for nine years struggled to find a market for his milletbase­d edible cutlery as an alternativ­e to rice. Battling enormous personal struggle, he set up a company to manufactur­e edible cutlery which went viral serendipit­ously. Today,with some difficulty, he is seeking corporate funding to scale up the fruits of his hard ALIEN project.

When we turn our attention toward something, we must necessaril­y turn it away from something else. Because attention is a selective activity, we must choose attention individual­s with determines which the they where external allocation overlook. and which and organisati­ons environmen­t. on stimuli directs Narayana what person person they to how focus. interact notice Peesapaty It to to notice notice This and

wasn’t the first India’s groundwate­r levels. was first among (that But declining we he the know his attention of ) to focus on the driving forces behind those trends. And he was determined enough to do something about it. Another interestin­g story is that of Teresa Hodge, who set up a startup to help those people who had some form of a police record against them get jobs. Although the US accounts for just 5 per cent of the world’s population, it houses “25 per cent of its prison population. As of 2020, the American criminal justice system holds almost 2.3 million people in 1,833 state prisons, 110 federal prisons, 1,772 juvenile correction­al facilities, 3,134 local jails, and 218 immigratio­n detention facilities, as well as military prisons ”. Once their sentences have been served, many of these former prisoners find it extremely difficult to find good jobs, even if they had been booked on some minor charges. Ms Hodge challenged the model of traditiona­l background check companies whose reports consisted entirely of arrest and conviction records, which most people take for granted. She showed both imaginatio­n and navigation in the ALIEN framework to come up with a solution and then pivot on it to take advantage of a crisis to mainstream her risk assessment framework.

Books about frameworks are usually solutions in search of problems, to forcefit a particular thinking into any problem that they can find convenient. ALIEN Thinking is both fresh and imaginativ­e, actionable and dynamic, which makes it a joy to understand, observe and practice.

 ??  ?? A.L.I.E.N. A.L.I.E.N. THINKING: THINKING: The Unconventi­onal Path to Breakthrou­gh Ideas Author: Cyril Bouquet, Jean-louis Barsoux & Michael Wade Publisher: Public
Affairs; Price: $28
A.L.I.E.N. A.L.I.E.N. THINKING: THINKING: The Unconventi­onal Path to Breakthrou­gh Ideas Author: Cyril Bouquet, Jean-louis Barsoux & Michael Wade Publisher: Public Affairs; Price: $28
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