An unconventional, hands-on guide to turning ideas into
products that matter—and that people love—from the legendary Silicon Valley
pioneer, founder of Zynga, and creator of Stanford Graduate School of
Business’s product management course.
Mark Pincus has been at the forefront of each iteration of
the internet. He built the original app company ahead of the mobile app
economy and sold virtual goods to the masses long before in-app purchase
generated $85 billion on smartphones. As the founder of Zynga, he brought us
FarmVille, CityVille, and Words with Friends, launching eight hit games and
reaching more than a billion users in four years.
Pincus has turned hit-making into a repeatable system,
birthing one of his favorite guiding principles that “all new fails”. Life
at the Speed of Play is his framework for moving faster and massively
increasing your odds of success. His insights and advice are essential in the
new world of AI, where speed of testing and learning defines winners.
Bursting with wit, wisdom, and a core belief in tech’s
endless capacity, each chapter of Life at the Speed of Play contains
actionable takeaways based on Pincus’s unorthodox “Mark-isms” including “hire
people with broken resumes,” “protect investors from themselves,” and,
paradoxically, to “f*** scale” in favor of quality over quantity.
What They Don’t Teach You at Harvard Business School for
the twenty-first century, here is the essential “bible” for entrepreneurs,
product managers, innovators, and anyone who has an idea—digital or analog—that
they dream of turning into a reality.
About the Author
Mark Pincus is one of the tech industry’s most
prominent entrepreneurs, known for repeatedly spotting and shaping the
internet’s biggest hits. He is best known as the founder of Zynga, the pioneer
of social mobile games. He graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Science
in economics from The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and
earned his MBA from Harvard Business School. A deeply committed father to five
kids, including a special needs son, he lives in San Francisco. When not
building products and companies, he can be found in the ocean, surfing.