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3 Works 386 Members 7 Reviews

Works by Reed Hastings

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1960-10-08
Gender
male
Nationality
USA

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Interesting Look At Business Practices Less Common Than Many Claim. Let me be clear here: I am a 14 year professional software developer in my "day job". I've worked for very small companies with barely 100 people and owned by a single person all the way to one of the largest companies on the planet (Fortune 50). And because I've had a 14 year career in this field as of 2021, that means this has all been done since NetFlix has been doing its thing.

And yet while I've heard that the Valley works a bit differently than the East Coast / Southern companies I've worked for, I'd never heard of several of the policies Hastings and Meyer discuss in this text. For this developer, most of them sound *phenomenal*, and I would *love* to work in environments that had them. Though there are others - "Adequate performance is given a generous severance" in particular - that would exacerbate issues I've already had at times in my career. Here, Hastings explains the reasons he adopted these policies at NetFlix and how they have grown over the company's existence. Meyer provides a degree of "outsider feedback" going around interviewing people at all levels from Hastings to the janitors and examining the claims Hastings makes.

Overall, this is a solid business book explaining these policies, why NetFlix chose them, why other businesses should - or should not, in certain situations - and how they can begin to be implemented in any company. More for Executives than heads down coders or low level team leads, though there are some interesting points even at those levels. It is absolutely something business leaders should read and ponder, and it is a good primer for those who may want to push for similar changes in their own companies. Very much recommended.
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BookAnonJeff | 6 other reviews | Dec 23, 2024 |
A very different approach to run an effective business from the Netflix team.

It's certainly a thought provoking read and there are many strategies that could be adopted by a number of businesses. However, some are clearly rooted in American business culture and legal framework where employees have fewer rights than in Europe and the UK.

I would still recommend this book, it just needs to be read with local regulations firmly in mind.
 
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Cotswoldreader | 6 other reviews | Jun 22, 2022 |
A must-read for managers and founders who want to see the other extreme of transparency and pushing down decision making; how it works at Netflix. Hard to imagine it working out as well in a less successful company but still a very interesting case study.
 
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eatonphil | 6 other reviews | May 8, 2022 |
Reed Hastings brought in a culture of high performance and great candor at NetFlix. This book details the journey across two decades of building NetFlix as a global multinational by creating its own unique culture. Authors detail out the key organisational behaviours that made NetFlix a high throughput organisation. Well written with three perspectives presented throughout the book, Reed’s, outsider perspective by Erin and of employees.
 
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saurabh_03 | 6 other reviews | Jun 27, 2021 |

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Works
3
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386
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Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
7
ISBNs
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