Edgerati are people who venture out onto various edges, engage with participants on those edges, develop deep insight from their involvement on the edge and report back to the rest of the world what they have learned.
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- John Hagel III and John Seely Brown

Edgerati

Chris Anderson
Brian Arthur
John Perry Barlow
Yochai Benkler
Eric Beinhocker
Amar Bhide
Peter Boettke
Max Boisot
Chris Brogan
Erik Brynjolfsson
Ronald Burt
Manuel Castells
Henry Chesbrough
Clayton Christensen
Tom Copeland
Peter Drucker
Esther Dyson
Philip Evans
Richard Florida
Nicolai Foss
Tom Friedman
George Gilder
Seth Godin
Michael Goldhaber
Mark Granovetter
Friedrich von Hayek
Dion Hinchcliffe
John Holland
Peter Huber
Mimi Ito
Jane Jacobs
Henry Jenkins
Michael Jensen
Stuart Kauffman
Guy Kawasaki
David Kirkpatrick
Chandran Kukathas
Karim Lakhani
Richard Langlois
Larry Lessig
Charlene Li
Brian Loasby
Christopher Locke
Tom Malone
Richard MacManus
Om Malik
Geoffrey Moore
Barry J. Nalebuff
Avinash K. Dixit
Beth Noveck
Tim O'Reilly
Elinor Ostrom
John Padgett
Scott Page
Ann Pendleton-Jullian
Michael Polanyi
Carlota Perez
JP Rangaswami
Eric Raymond
Howard Rheingold
Doug Rushkoff
Saskia Sassen
Annalee Saxenian
Christian Sarkar
Klaus Schwab
Clay Shirky
Steven Spear
Linda Stone
Jonathan Taplin
Doug Thomas
Sherry Turkle
Hal Varian
Eric Von Hippel
Steve Weber
Karl Weick
David Weinberger

Edgerati nominations>>

 

Voices from the Edge

   

Edgerati Bios

Chris Anderson
Wrote the definitive book on the growing fragmentation of markets and the growing importance of the long tail and continues to enlighten in his exploration of economies of abundance
Read:
The Long Tail

Brian Arthur
Increasing returns economics
are critical to understanding competitive dynamics in technology and electronic networks in particular. These economics can be powerful, although they are far less widespread than often believed. Brian is one of the most insightful economists regarding increasing returns.
Read:
Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy (Economics, Cognition, and Society)

John Perry Barlow
John and I went to Wesleyan together, stirred up some trouble there and each, in our own way, have continued to stir up trouble ever since. John has been a champion of individual freedom on the Net from its inception. He is also very astute about the diminishing value of information on electronic networks and the increasing value of personal relationships.
Read: A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace

Yochai Benkler
Great insight regarding the culture and incentive structures that are shaping the network society Read: The Wealth of Networks SITE

Eric Beinhocker
Friend and former colleague who more effectively than anyone integrates the latest insights from the field of complex adaptive systems with the world of business
Read: The Origin of Wealth

Amar Bhide
Constantly exploring new frontiers in business strategy, entrepreneurship and innovation
Read: The Venturesome Economy and The Origin and Evolution of New Businesses

Peter Boettke
Austrian economist who thinks clearly and deeply about the interplay between institutional frameworks and economic activity
Read: Challenging Institutional Analysis and Development and Calculation and Coordination
BLOG: www.coordinationproblem.org

Max Boisot
One of the most original analysts of information and knowledge dynamics and their relevance to business
Read: Information Space and Knowledge Assets

Chris Brogan
Chris is a social media consultant and co-author of Trust Agents, an important book emphasizing the importance of trust in the emergence and evolution of scalable social networks online.
Read: Trust Agents

Erik Brynjolfsson
Erik is one of the most thoughtful economists writing about the impact of electronic markets on buyers and sellers.
Read:
Understanding the Digital Economy : Data, Tools, and Research and Strategies for E-Business Success

Ronald Burt
One of the pioneers in social network analysis with a particular focus on understanding the structure of networks and the various roles that participants can play in these networks
Read: Structural Holes and Brokerage and Closure

Manuel Castells
Sociologist who writes insightfully about the information networks that are reshaping society
Read: The Rise of the Network Society, The Power of Identity and End of Millenium

Henry Chesbrough
Pioneer in exploring the potential of open innovation
Read: Open Innovation and Open Business Models

Clayton Christensen
Clay and I go way back to early days at BCG. His concepts regarding the business implications of disruptive technology are essential for any business executive - we are all operating in markets that are being shaped by technology capabilities.
Read:
The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail

Tom Copeland
Economist promoting real option theory and methodologies as an alternative to net present value methods of evaluating investment decisions
Read: Real Options

Peter Drucker
This man was amazing. Writing for over sixty years, Peter Drucker essentially pioneered the study of business management as a distinct discipline. He has always been at the leading edge of understanding changing management challenges and opportunities.
Read:
The Essential Drucker: In One Volume the Best of Sixty Years of Peter Drucker's Essential Writings on Management, Management Challenges for the 21st Century, Post-Capitalist Society, and Innovation and Entrepreneurship.

Esther Dyson
Esther has made her home on the frontiers of technology innovation for a long time now. Leveraging an awesome network of personal relationships, she can be counted upon to spot interesting new technologies before most of the rest of us and, more importantly, to grasp the profound implications of these new technologies.
Read:
Release 2.1: A Design for Living in the Digital Age
BLOG: www.edventure.com/flightschool/blog

Philip Evans
If you follow only one business strategist on the impact of electronic networks on business strategy, Philip is the one (other than me, of course). Philip and I started out at BCG together many years ago.
Read:
Blown to Bits: How the New Economics of Information Transforms Strategy

Richard Florida
Focuses on the critical role of the creative class in driving innovation and on the growing importance of talent spikes in amplifying the efforts of the creative class
Read: The Rise of the Creative Class, The Flight of the Creative Class and The Great Reset

Nicolai Foss
One of the economists leading the charge in developing more dynamic theories of the firm
Read: Entrepreneurship and the Firm and Strategy, Economic Organization, and the Knowledge Economy

Tom Friedman
Writes perceptively about processes of globalization and the role of digital technology infrastructures in helping us to connect more effectively regardless of geographic location
Read: The World Is Flat, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, and Hot, Flat, and Crowded

George Gilder
George is cantankerous and provocative, but his provocations are usually dead on target. Ranging from the microcosm to the telecosm, George has always focused on the role of technology in reducing scarcity in one dimension and increasing it in other dimensions. Since scarcity creates economic value, you need to understand George's insights.
Read:
Telecosm: The World After Bandwidth Abundance and Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution in Economics and Technology.

Seth Godin
A prolific writer and entrepreneur who has been focused for years on the edge of new marketing practices emerging and evolving as a result of new media
Read: Permission Marketing, Tribes and Linchpin

Michael Goldhaber
Michael was the first person to develop the economic implications of scarce attention (the fact that each of us only has 24 hours in the day while the range of options competing for our attention is rapidly expanding - how we choose to allocate our attention will increasingly determine who creates wealth and who destroys wealth). Anyone seeking to understand the evolving role of marketing and competitive dynamics needs to understand Goldhaber's insights.

Mark Granovetter
Another pioneer in social network analysis who has applied his perspectives to the emergence and evolution of business networks and innovation clusters
Read: The Strength of Weak Ties” (PDF)

Friedrich von Hayek
Nobel Prize winning economist who captured the challenges and opportunities of coordinating economic activity when tacit knowledge is so widely distributed, rapidly evolving and difficult to access
Read:Economics and Knowledge” and The Use of Knowledge in Society

Dion Hinchcliffe
Bridges the chasm that separates enterprise IT types from the digerati in an ongoing effort to craft a powerful new synthesis he describes as Web Oriented Architecture
Read: Web 2.0 Architectures

John Holland
One of the key theoreticians of the process of emergence where complex systems evolve out of much simpler systems.
Read: Hidden Order and Emergence

Peter Huber
Peter has been an articulate critic of the impact of government regulation on the evolution of telecommunications networks and a champion of market dynamics as the best way to shape technology innovation.
Read:
Law and Disorder in Cyberspace: Abolish the FCC and Let Common Law Rule the Telecosm

Mimi Ito
digital youth culture. How marginalized kids become great sources of innovation. Creator of the genres of participation – hanging out, messing around and geeking out and the various trajectories through these forms of participation in the digital age.

Jane Jacobs
Prolific and insightful theorist regarding the role of cities in economic growth
Read: Cities and the Wealth of Nations and The Economy of Cities

Henry Jenkins
Henry is one of the deeper thinkers regarding the evolution of digital media and the growing importance of participatory media
Read: Convergence Culture and Fans, Bloggers and Gamers

Michael Jensen
Michael is an economist who focuses on the tension between shareholders and corporate management. Anyone interested in the relationship between organizational design and corporate financial performance needs to be familiar with Jensen's work.
Read:
A Theory of the Firm: Governance, Residual Claims, and Organizational Forms and Foundations of Organizational Strategy.

Stuart Kauffman
One of the pioneers in the rich field of complexity theory, Stuart is both eloquent in his writing and insightful in his thinking. More than that, he has enthusiastically taken on the challenge of translating some of his more conceptual insights into practical tools that can help businesses create value. He is one of the early pioneers in thinking about economic webs.
Read:
Investigations, The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution, and At Home in the Universe: The Search for Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity.

Guy Kawasaki
One of the original Apple evangelists and still going strong as entrepreneur, venture capitalist and prolific writer who explores the requirements for disruptive innovation
Read: Rules for Revolutionaries

David Kirkpatrick
Long-time tech journalist who has now written the definitive book on Facebook and is a founder of the Techonomy movement
Read: The Facebook Effect

Chandran Kukathas
Political scientist who writes extensively on the challenges of fostering cosmopolitan societies that effectively integrate cultural diversity and overlapping group loyalties
Read: The Liberal Archipelago

Karim Lakhani
Karim explores the dynamics and performance of distributed innovation systems where enterprises and communities intersect
Read: Perspectives on Free and Open Source Software and The Principles of Distributed Innovation

Richard Langlois
Economist exploring a dynamic theory of business institutions with a particular emphasis on the role of modular systems and business networks in facilitating the rapid evolution of business innovation
Read: Firms, Markets and Economic Change and The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism

Larry Lessig
Tireless champion of copyright law reform who focuses on the enhanced potential for innovation if we make it easier to build upon prior creative works
Read: Code and Free Culture

Charlene Li
Founder of a social media consulting group who has long been perceptive about the evolving dynamics of social media and the techniques required to build influence as well drive organizational transformation
Read:  Groundswell and Open Leadership

Brian Loasby
Economist focused on the organization of knowledge within the economy and understanding the evolutionary processes within economies.
Read: Knowledge, Institutions and Evolution in Economics and Equilibrium and Evolution

Christopher Locke
role of electronic networks in reshaping relationships, both personal and business. The metaphor of moving from broadcast to conversations is critical to understand how to succeed on networks.
Read:
The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual and Gonzo Marketing: Winning Through Worst Practices.

Tom Malone
Earlier than most of us, Tom was focused on the impact of electronic networks in reshaping business organizations. He provides deep insight into the new organizational options and requirements enabled by network technology.

Richard MacManus
A deeply insightful Kiwi who has been tracing the evolution of the Internet and built a blog into a thriving business by helping others to understand where this is all headed.

Om Malik
Started by investigating the changes in the telecommunications industry but began to realize the story was much broader and is now a leading analyst of Internet trends at GigaOM Network as well as a venture investor
Read: Broadbandits

Geoffrey Moore
The crossing the chasm guy and prolific writer and thinker about innovation processes and the challenges in moving innovations into markets.
Read: Crossing the Chasm and Dealing with Darwin

Barry J. Nalebuff (along with Avinash K. Dixit)
This team writes perceptively about game theory and decision-making processes focusing on anticipating and preempting what others will do.
Read: Thinking Strategically and The Art of Strategy

Beth Noveck
Peer-to-patent creator, wikigovernment, organizer of the State of Play conferences.

Tim O'Reilly. Tim is one of the leading publishers and conference organizers in the technology world today. Developer of the first Internet portal back in 1995, Tim was one of the first people to see the economic potential of the Internet. Today, he is one of the leading champions of peer-to-peer and open source technology.

Elinor Ostrom
Nobel Prize winning economist who explores the institutional arrangements helping to support economic activity in the commons, with a particular focus on cooperation, trust and collective action
Read: Governing the Commons and Understanding Institutional Diversity

John Padgett. A historian by profession and affiliated with the Santa Fe Institute, John's work is critical for anyone who wants to mobilize and exploit the potential of economic webs. Concentrating on Renaissance Italy, Padgett provides compelling evidence of the role of networks of relationships in creating shaping opportunities during times of fundamental change and uncertainty. Read: "Robust Action and the Rise of the Medici, 1400 – 1434"

Scott Page
Deep insight regarding the ways in which different forms of diversity work together to shape creative outcomes Read: The Difference

Ann Pendleton-Jullian
Particularly interested in design as a disposition and in the vital exchange between ideas and architecture, thought and action and the role of the tacit in design.
Read: The Road That Is Not a Road and the Open City

Michael Polanyi
One of the earliest and most thoughtful theoreticians of the role and importance of “tacit knowledge”
Read: Personal Knowledge and The Tacit Dimension

Carlota Perez
Economic historian focusing on the role of technology infrastructures in economic history and analyzing patterns of infrastructure deployment and adoption
Read: Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital

JP Rangaswami
Has been a senior IT executive in a number of large and well-known companies but also writes perceptively about the broader social and economic implications of the network technology.

Eric Raymond. Eric is one of the most active champions of the open source software movement. He is also a strong advocate of personal freedom on electronic networks. Eric is always a provocative and challenging thinker.
Read:
The Cathedral and the Bazaar: Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary

Howard Rheingold. Howard was the first person to draw attention to the social phenomenon of virtual communities on electronic networks. He understands the complex social dynamics that emerge and evolve in these virtual communities.
Read:
The Virtual Community : Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier and Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution

Doug Rushkoff
Teaches media studies at the New School University, is a prominent writer of fiction and non-fiction work  and a producer of documentaries. He has written a book that takes the Big Shift to an entirely new level, tracing important shifts in the economy and society since the Late Middle Ages
Read: Life, Inc.

Saskia Sassen
Proponent of “global cities” thesis exploring evolution of informational architectures that integrate cities around the world into dense networks  
Read: The Global City and Global Networks, Linked Cities

Annalee Saxenian
Brilliant analyst of economic clusters who emphasizes the role of social networks within and across clusters in driving their success  
Read: Regional Advantage and The New Argonauts

Christian Sarkar
Christian is a collaborator and friend. He's a leader in the emerging field of online ecosystem strategy and has deep knowledge in double loop marketing and online community building.

Klaus Schwab. Klaus does not write a lot, but he is one of the most entrepreneurial and visionary men that I know. Starting with a small gathering of European executives more than 25 years ago, Klaus built the World Economic Forum into an extraordinary gathering place for business and government leaders. He has a broad range of interests, he has been a constructive force for the peaceful settlement of disputes around the world and he is currently focused on helping to promote social entrepreneurship to address some of the most pressing social issues around the world.

Clay Shirky. Clay is an articulate evangelist for peer-to-peer technology and Web services. Clay summarizes his interests as "systems where vested interests lose out to innovation" and "systems where having good participants produces better results than having good planners". He is always a thoughtful commentator on current technology trends.
Read:
Planning for Web Services: Obstacles and Opportunities

Steven Spear
Writes deep perspectives on competitive business strategy focusing in particular on the interaction between velocity and complexity.
Read: Chasing the Rabbit and The High-Velocity Edge

Linda Stone
One of the leading theorists on the attention economy with a particular interest in techniques to augment attention, Linda has written eloquently about continuous partial attention and the aphrodisiac of attention. She has been an executive in the tech industry and spent many years at Microsoft Research.

Jonathan Taplin
Widely read blogger on the digital movements and their impacts on music industry, government and education.

Doug Thomas
Game theoretician, keen observer of and writes about hacker culture.
Read: Hacker Culture

Sherry Turkle
Sherry explores the complex interaction between electronic networks and personal identity. She offers a very nuanced view of the complex ways we present ourselves and construct relationships online.
Read:
Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet and The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit

Hal Varian
Hal is an economist who resolutely applies the rigor of his discipline to the world of technology and electronic networks. Refusing to get carried away by hype, he asks basic questions to generate deep insight into the dynamics of competition in markets shaped by new technology.
Read:
Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy

Eric Von Hippel
Explores the increasing involvement of suppliers and customers in the innovation process
Read: The Sources of Innovation and Democratizing Innovation

Steve Weber
Explores the governance structures and processes that help to ensure that open source initiatives stay focused and stay productive.
Read: The Success of Open Source

Karl Weick
Prolific and insightful management theorist who introduced such organizational concepts as “loose coupling”, “mindfulness” and “sensemaking”
Read: Managing the Unexpected and Sensemaking in Institutions

David Weinberger
Explores the emergent structures that help us to more effectively organize the growing array of data and information that flourishes on our digital networks
Read: Everything is Miscellaneous and Small Pieces Loosely Joined