Discussion forum
?CAD discussions, advices, exchange of experience

Please abide by the rules of this forum.
|
Post Reply ![]() |
Author | |
AliveInTheLab ![]() RSS robots ![]() Joined: 20.Nov.2009 Status: Offline Points: 425 |
![]() Posted: 22.Aug.2014 at 04:00 |
The POV Dispatch is our Autodesk internal newsletter, published monthly, where we discuss the big ideas that are important to us and our customers. It is published by our Corporate Strategy & Engagement (CS&E) team of which Autodesk Labs is a part. Jon Pittman is the VP of CS&E, so it should come as no surprise that Jon routinely makes submissions to issues of the POV Dispatch. Jon is also a Lecturer at the Haas School of Business of the University of California at Berkeley. Jon contributed this book review to a recent issue, and it was popular among employees. Ed Catmull is the CEO and founder of Pixar. Creativity, Inc. is a combination of history of Pixar and Ed's lessons for running a creative company. He describes many aspects of the Pixar creative process and culture, including a culture that embraces failure as a learning mode, constructive criticism, and starting with an idea and refining it relentlessly until it works. One thing I liked about the book is that it also covers the history of Pixar — which is a history of entertainment computer graphics — with some parallels to my career and Autodesk. There are a few people I know in the book and many that I know by reputation. Pixar was sold to Disney, and Catmull became the head of Disney Animation. The book covers the merger of Pixar and Disney Animation and describes what Catmull and John Lassiter, Pixar's lead animator, did to make that merger work. Their success there shows the value of culture and leadership — as well as a pretty humble style. Catmull ends the book with a nice coda tribute to Steve Jobs. While Jobs is most known for Apple, he also owned and was Chairman of Pixar (and sold it to Disney). While Ed ran Pixar, he spoke with Jobs weekly and he said Jobs really nurtured Pixar — although it was sometimes through tough love. Ed says that many remember the bad aspects of Jobs' personality but there were many good aspects, and he was a great steward for Pixar. Catmull dedicated the book to Steve Jobs — which is a testament to how he felt about Jobs and his contribution to Pixar. Lessons for companies like Autodesk Creativity, Inc. won't provide a magic recipe for creativity and innovation but will provide insight into how Pixar does it. Catmull has a nice appendix which distills his lessons for managing a creative culture. Some of those lessons can be applied to Autodesk:
The key thing that stands out in Ed Catmull's book is that success is all about people and their interaction. He seems to have established a culture of excellence, creative conflict, and interdependence. These are hard things to do — and require constant leadership and management attention. Clearly, they have been successful at Pixar and are applicable to Autodesk. One of the best quotes in the appendix defines what leadership really is "Excellence, quality, and good should be earned words, attributed by others to us, not proclaimed by us about ourselves." There are a lot of books that purport to provide insight on how to be creative and innovative. Most fail to provide such insight. Creativity, Inc. is different. Catmull's perspective leading Pixar and later Disney Animation gives him real credibility. The lessons that Catmull projects are mostly common sense but may be hard to implement in practice. The evidence from Pixar is that if you can implement them, Catmull's lessons work. Thanks Jon. Striving for greatness is alive in the lab. Go to the original post... |
|
It's Alive in ihe Lab - Autodesk Labs blog by Scott Sheppard
|
|
![]() |
Post Reply ![]() |
|
Tweet
|
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions ![]() You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |
This page was generated in 0,137 seconds.