With AI upending work and life, the bestselling authors of Smart Brevity offer a one-stop survival guide to dramatically improving your life, work, and happiness.
Toxic complexity clogs our meetings, inboxes, calendars—even in our daily habits. We can do so much more, but first we need to do less.
Simplify shows you how. It's a step-by-step playbook for spending most of your time doing things that make you feel and perform better.
This urgent manual lets you take control of what is essential in a world where AI might simplify you out of a job. Maximize success by simplifying every aspect of your life. Ruthlessly distill what really matters to you, then clear the space to focus on what you do best.
Simplify will help anyone thrive, from interns to CEOs.
The authors draw on lessons from founding two hot startups—Axios and Politico—and their years of experience advising Fortune 500 companies. Simplify is packed with advice from some of the world's most successful people—your handbook for eliminating dreary distractions... so you can focus on what matters.
Jim VandeHei is the cofounder and CEO of Axios, a media company focused on breaking news and invaluable insights across business, politics, technology, and the world. VandeHei is also coauthor of Smart Brevity: The Power of Saying More with Less. Before Axios, VandeHei cofounded and was CEO of Politico, the media company that upended and revolutionized political and policy journalism. Prior to this, VandeHei spent more than a decade as a reporter, covering the presidency and Congress for The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post. VandeHei is from Oshkosh, Wisconsin. He has a bachelor's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.
View titles by Jim VandeHei
Mike Allen was the Chief White House correspondent for Politico and the author of the popular daily political tip sheet,Politico Playbook. Previously, he served as White House Correspondent for Time and spent six years at the Washington Post, where he covered President George W. Bush's first term, Capitol Hill, campaign finance, and the Bush, Gore, and Bradley campaigns of 2000.
View titles by Mike Allen
With AI upending work and life, the bestselling authors of Smart Brevity offer a one-stop survival guide to dramatically improving your life, work, and happiness.
Toxic complexity clogs our meetings, inboxes, calendars—even in our daily habits. We can do so much more, but first we need to do less.
Simplify shows you how. It's a step-by-step playbook for spending most of your time doing things that make you feel and perform better.
This urgent manual lets you take control of what is essential in a world where AI might simplify you out of a job. Maximize success by simplifying every aspect of your life. Ruthlessly distill what really matters to you, then clear the space to focus on what you do best.
Simplify will help anyone thrive, from interns to CEOs.
The authors draw on lessons from founding two hot startups—Axios and Politico—and their years of experience advising Fortune 500 companies. Simplify is packed with advice from some of the world's most successful people—your handbook for eliminating dreary distractions... so you can focus on what matters.
Author
Jim VandeHei is the cofounder and CEO of Axios, a media company focused on breaking news and invaluable insights across business, politics, technology, and the world. VandeHei is also coauthor of Smart Brevity: The Power of Saying More with Less. Before Axios, VandeHei cofounded and was CEO of Politico, the media company that upended and revolutionized political and policy journalism. Prior to this, VandeHei spent more than a decade as a reporter, covering the presidency and Congress for The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post. VandeHei is from Oshkosh, Wisconsin. He has a bachelor's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.
View titles by Jim VandeHei
Mike Allen was the Chief White House correspondent for Politico and the author of the popular daily political tip sheet,Politico Playbook. Previously, he served as White House Correspondent for Time and spent six years at the Washington Post, where he covered President George W. Bush's first term, Capitol Hill, campaign finance, and the Bush, Gore, and Bradley campaigns of 2000.
View titles by Mike Allen