moneyball
Moneyball, a book by Michael Lewis (2003), highlights how creativity, framing, and robust technical analysis all played a part in the development of a new approach to talent management in baseball. It also exhibited great examples of the biases and psychological pitfalls that plague decision makers.
Review the article “Who’s on First?” by Thaler & Sunstein (2003) from this module’s assigned readings. This article reviews the book Moneyball by Michael Lewis.
Write a critique of the article including the following points:
- Examine why sabermetric-based player evaluation is such a shock to other executives in baseball.
- Evaluate why Beane is much more effective in his success by constructing a matrix of pitfalls and heuristics that highlight the differences between Beane’s team and other executives.
- Moneyball highlights how people tend to overestimate the likelihood of success and end up facing financial loss—in this case, it meant forfeiting millions of dollars. Analyze a professional or personal decision (yours or otherwise) that highlights this predilection in spite of substantial losses.
- Explain how you would apply Moneyball’s management lessons in your own endeavors.
Write a 3–5-page paper in Word format. Apply APA standards to citation of sources. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M1_A3.doc.
12 years ago 15
Purchase the answer to view it
- moneyball.doc
Purchase the answer to view it
- moneyball.doc
Purchase the answer to view it
- moneyball.doc
- moneyball_2.doc
- RES 351 Week 5 DQ 1, DQ 2 and DQ 3
- a friend lent 15400 to Dawn w.monroe, the owner of comic book store. she repaid the loan at the end...
- Which of these does not fit with the others?
- PSY 480 Week 2 DQ 1 and DQ 2
- PSY 450 Week 4 Individual Assignment Psychological Disorder Paper
- PRG 211 Week 3 VLS Team C
- STR 581 WEEK 3 QUIZ
- HCS 455 Week 3 Individual - Policy Process Part I
- HCS 449 Week 1, DQ 1
- GEN 480 Week 2 - Skills Assessment Matrix