Synopses & Reviews
The world is full of wonderful products and services that occasionally disappoint and even harm us.
Unexpected Consequences: Why The Things We Trust Fail explores the reasons these failures occur, examining them from technological, human, and organizational perspectives. Using more than 40 recent catastrophic events to illustrate its points, the book discusses structural and machine failure, but also the often-overlooked failure of people and of systems related to such things as information technology, healthcare, and security.
As the book demonstrates, faulty technology played a surprisingly small part in many of the scrutinized disasters. Author James William Martin finds cognitive factors and organizational dynamics, including ethics, are major contributors to most unexpected and catastrophic failures causing loss of life and extensive property damage. With that fresh perspective in mind, Martin is able to suggest remedies that address service failure and just may help prevent future disasters from taking place.
Review
"The book's seven chapters provide an interesting, timely perspective on the unique interrelationship among a project's technological design, an organization's culture and dynamics, and social-psychological factors such as attitudes, information filtering, self-concept, social influence, status, self-esteem, and volition as causal factors in the often unexpected and usually catastrophic failures." - Choice
Synopsis
In this book, interrelationships between more than 40 recent catastrophic events are explored, discussing failures of structures and machines, information technology, regulatory agencies, security designs, and more.
Synopsis
• Presents the technical, cognitive, and organizational factors associated with the design and failure of products and services
• Introduces new topics related to social psychology, as well as organizational culture and ethics, to explain product and service failures
• Shows that when failures occur, they are often due to human error rather than unknown technology
• Provides helpful advice for preventing failures of products and services
Synopsis
• Over 40 case studies
• Easy to grasp figures, tables, and templates to help the readers understand the concepts
• A glossary of relevant terms
• A bibliography