Author
Alan Deutschman.
Alan Deutschman is one of America's leading writers on
change and innovation. His groundbreaking book, "Change
or Die: The Three Keys to Change at Work and in Life,"
debunks our myths about this crucial topic and reveals
the surprising truths about what actually inspires and
motivates real change. Drawing on a startling range of
compelling case studies—from heart patients and
heroin-addicted criminals who transform their lives,
to major corporations that revamp their cultures and
pull off astonishing turnarounds—Deutschman is
an enlightening and energetic speaker who conveys great
insight and passion about our untapped potential for
profound change.
Deutschman is Executive Director of Unboundary, a strategy
consulting firm whose clientele includes top executives at
major companies such as FedEx and Charles Schwab. In a 19-year
career as a business journalist, Deutschman has been the
Silicon Valley correspondent for Fortune; a senior writer
at GQ, where he wrote the "Profit Motive" column;
and a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, where he has co-authored
the "New Establishment" power list for the past
decade. Most recently, he was a senior writer for Fast Company.
Deutschman has interviewed and profiled many of the most
influential and innovative figures in global business, including
Apple's Steve Jobs, Microsoft's Bill Gates, Amazon.com's
Jeff Bezos, Google's Sergey Brin, and Virgin's Richard Branson,
and he has studied the successful turnarounds and change
efforts at companies such as Apple, IBM, and Yahoo.
Alan Deutschman has been interviewed as an expert on change
and psychology by Katie Couric on The Today Show and by Paula
Zahn on CNN.
His books have been featured on the covers of the Sunday
book review sections of both The Washington Post and The
San Francisco Chronicle, and have been published worldwide
and translated into Japanese, Chinese, Korean, German, Spanish,
Portuguese, Italian, and Dutch.
Alan Deutschman's latest book, "Change or Die," inspired
by his sensational cover story for Fast Company, was released
in January 2007 and quickly became a San Francisco Chronicle
bestseller. He is also the author of "The Second Coming of
Steve Jobs," which was both a Business Week and a Wall Street
Journal bestseller, and "A Tale of Two Valleys: Wine, Wealth,
and the Battle for the Good Life in Napa and Sonoma."
Deutschman
paid his way through Princeton University largely by winning
scholarships for public speaking and debate, an experience
that inspired him to publish "Winning Money for
College" while still a teenager. |