About Amy J Radin

Amy J. Radin is a nationally recognized Fortune 100 Chief Marketing and Innovation Officer, advisor and investor, board member, and thought leader on how to deliver innovation for sustainable, business-changing impact. She has been at the forefront of rewiring brands for growth, and now applies her expertise working with executives to reduce the uncertainty, ambiguity and uncertainty, and realize the benefits of innovation. She built a track record of success moving ideas to performance at Citi, American Express, E*TRADE and AXA. The Change Maker's Playbook: How to Seek, Seed and Scale Innovation in Any Company is Amy's first book and captures her field-tested experience as the top executive accountable for achieving innovation results under varied, complex and rapidly changing conditions. Amy is a graduate of The Wharton School and Wesleyan University. She serves on the Board of the AICPA where she is advising on marketing strategy and the impact of technology and workforce disruption on accounting and financial advisory services for 650,000 member professionals across the globe. She established and sponsors an annual social impact fellowship at the NYU Stern Graduate School of Business, benefitting students, not-for-profits and government agencies in the New York metro community for over a decade. Paul B. Carroll is the Editor-in-Chief of Insurance Thought Leadership, a digital publishing platform that is a catalyst for change in insurance and risk management. The site curates the work of more than 1,000 thought leaders and has 60,000 subscribers to its weekly newsletter. A thought leader on innovation, Paul is a co-founder of and partner with the Devil's Advocate Group, a strategy consulting boutique. He spent 17 years as a reporter and editor at the Wall Street Journal. He was nominated twice for a Pulitzer Prize and was a finalist in 1996. Later, he founded and edited Context magazine, which was a finalist in 2001 for the National Magazine Award for General Excellence. He is the co-author, with Chunka Mui, of "The New Killer Apps: How Large Companies Can Out-Innovate Start-Ups,"? and "Billion-Dollar Lessons: What You Can Learn From the Most Inexcusable Business Failures of the Last 25 Years,"? based on research by a team of 20 that spent two years investigating 2,500 major write-offs. Paul's first book, "Big Blues: The Unmaking of IBM," was a major best-seller in 1993.

We have updated our privacy policy. Click here to read our full policy.