Some books arrive with a lot of urgency and very little shelf life. They are written for the panic of the quarter, the conference circuit, or the next LinkedIn post. Roger Spitz’s Disrupt with Impact feels different. It is urgent, yes, but it is also trying to stay useful after the headlines move on.
That is what I look for in books about uncertainty. Not fear, not bravado, but a framework sturdy enough to revisit. The best compliment I can pay this book is that it feels built for rereading. You can return to it when the market shifts, when a plan stops working, or when the future starts acting like itself again.
Spitz is interested in how people think under pressure, which gives the book a more reflective texture than many business titles. It still moves. It still teaches. But it does not mistake noise for wisdom.
There is a place on the shelf for books that calm you down by helping you think more clearly. This is one of them.
Get your copy: Disrupt with Impact on Amazon