Discipline by Subtraction : The Art Of Strategic Laziness
(2025)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Madder Lion Press, 2025
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9798999472724 MWT18555458, 18555458
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

What if the real key to productivity isn't doing more-but doing less on purpose? Discipline by Subtraction: The Art of Strategic Laziness is a provocative manifesto for anyone drowning in overload, addicted to optimization, or caught in institutional inertia. Drawing from two decades in combat zones, diplomatic trenches, and federal bureaucracy, James Snoddy delivers a field-tested doctrine for reclaiming time, clarity, and agency. Rejecting the cult of hustle and the tyranny of to-do lists, Snoddy argues that most modern systems-whether personal, organizational, or governmental-fail not because they aren't doing enough, but because they refuse to stop doing the wrong things. Through real-world examples, strategic frameworks, and darkly funny observations, this book shows how to systematically eliminate waste, distraction, and low-value obligations. At once philosophical and practical, Discipline by Subtraction bridges behavioral science, systems theory, and decision analysis to teach you how to: - Delete low-ROI tasks, meetings, and metrics without guilt - Design subtraction systems that free up mental bandwidth - Prioritize actions based on return, not tradition or optics - Build scalable strategies that resist scope creep and burnout - Survive and thrive in institutions driven by additive logic Whether you're a policymaker, entrepreneur, creative professional, or just someone trying to stay afloat in a culture of overload, this book will help you stop optimizing what should be eliminated. It offers a counterintuitive but deeply logical lens on leadership, self-management, and organizational reform. This is not a guide to working faster. It's a call to work smarter by working less-but working with ruthless precision. If you've ever felt that "more" is the enemy of "better," this is your manual

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits