Less
is indeed more in our age of excess in everything. Our lives have become complicated,
overwhelming, and more demanding. Award
winning author Matthew E. May has an answer for this in his book The Laws ofSubtraction. Subtraction is defined simply as the art of removing anything
excessive, confusing, wasteful, unnatural, hazardous, hard to use, or ugly … or
the discipline to refrain from adding it in the first place.
The
Laws of Subtraction provide insights and lessons towards removing the clutter
and honing in on the essence in order to awaken the creativity and innovation
that generally gets buried under a deluge of non-essential information. Through
a series of excellent stories that serve as examples for his laws in action,
May highlights the unique features of these laws and their applicability to
everyday life, both professional and personal.
May
has distilled years of research on achieving maximum effect through minimum
means into six simple rules:
Law #1: What Isn't
There Can Often Trump What Is
"When
you reduce the number of doors that someone can walk through, more people walk
through the one that you want them to walk through." – Scott Belsky,
founder and CEO of Behance and author of Making Ideas Happen
Law #2: The Simplest
Rules Create the Most Effective Experience
“Keeping
it simple isn't easy. By exploiting subtraction in innovation, we've been able
to create an environment of freedom and creativity that allows us to
thrive." – Brad Smith, CEO, Intuit
Law #3: Limiting
Information Engages the Imagination
"Subtraction
can mean the difference between a highly persuasive presentation and a long,
convoluted, and confusing one. Why say more when you can say less?" –
Carmine Gallo, author of The Apple Experience: Secrets to Building Insanely
Great Customer Loyalty
Law #4: Creativity
Thrives Under Intelligent Constraints
“Here’s
the key to the conundrum for managers who want to stoke the innovation fire:
That close cousin of scarcity, constraint, can indeed foster creativity.” –
Teresa Amabile, author of The Progress Principle
Law #5: Break Is the
Important Part of Breakthrough
“If
you kill the butterflies in your stomach, you’ll kill the dream. Embrace the
feeling. Save the butterflies.” – Jonathan Fields, author of Uncertainty
Law #6: Doing
Something Isn’t Always Better Than Doing Nothing
“When
we’re faced with the greatest odds against us, often we need to edit rather
than add.” – Chip Conley, cofounder of Joie de Vivre Hospitality and author of
Emotional Equations
In
each chapter, May introduces you to a few illustrative examples of how a
particular law was applied in a powerful way. He uses philosophy and science to
explain why a certain law is so effective. One of the many reasons that reading
this book is a pure pleasure is that his writing style, storytelling and
illustrations reinforce his core message that less can be more... and more
meaningful.
While
writing this book, Matthew May invited some 50 people to be guest contributors,
sharing their thoughts, feelings, and experiences about subtraction. At the end
of each chapter is a series of one page articles written by these "guest
authors" giving their view of the topic. I found these to be some of the
best part of the book. Each author has their own gems of wisdom. By distilling
them to one page, we get the best from each author.
May
both challenges you and helps you think a bit differently by using subtraction
to better with less. The art of subtraction: when you remove just the right
thing in just the right way, something good usually happens. So if you wanted
to be informed and inspired about doing better with less than The Laws of
Subtraction is your guide.
I
highly recommend Matthew E. May’s The Laws of Subtraction for anyone who wants
to simplify and improve the quality of work and life.
Disclosure:
The publisher provided me a copy of The Laws of Subtraction for review.
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