• Home
  • Podcast
  • Curated Questions
  • Lists
  • Famous Questions
  • Quotes
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • About

Curated Questions

Celebrating The Power Of Questions

  • Home
  • Podcast
  • Curated Questions
  • Lists
  • Famous Questions
  • Quotes
  • Resources
  • Blog
  • About

#61 Rob Walker: The Art of Noticing: How Asking Better Questions Changes What We See!

"If all you do is pay attention to what everyone else is paying attention to, then  by definition you're not likely to innovate anything or create anything very original or different or surprising." - Rob Walker

Writer and cultural observer Rob Walker joins Ken to explore how questions and noticing reshape the way we move through the world. Rob traces his origin story back to discovering journalism at 18—a framework that gave a shy, introverted kid permission to ask questions on behalf of others.

They dig into his book and newsletter The Art of Noticing, talking about everyday noticing assignments, why “what am I missing?” is a powerful self-question, and how small acts of attention can mark time and make life more memorable.

Rob shares the story behind the Significant Objects project and why story—not price tag—creates real value in the objects we keep. From New Orleans as a “conversational city” to his teaching on point of view and manifestos, Rob reflects on questions as both agency and responsibility, in democracies, organizations, and personal life. Be sure to subscribe to Rob's Substack The Art of Noticing newsletter at https://robwalker.substack.com/

This Curated Questions episode can be found on all major platforms and at CuratedQuestions.com.

Keep questioning!

Read more

tags: Curated Questions, Ken Woodward, Rob Walker, Art of Noticing, questions, curiosity, noticing, intentional noticing, asking better questions, cultural criticism, journalism, Significant Objects, storytelling, meaning and value, overlooked details, attention economy, listening, agency through questions, creative inquiry, design thinking, mindfulness, observation, narrative value, curiosity mindset, New Orleans culture, icebreaker questions, newsletter Substack, Point of View class, School of Visual Arts, Project Object
categories: Community, Connection, Leadership, Listening, Personal Growth, Creative Thinking, Imagination, Innovation
Wednesday 12.10.25
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

#60 Radhika Dutt: From Goals to Puzzles: How Questions Outperform OKRs in Real Teams!

"We vote with our labor for the world we want to create. If you don't reflect on what you're doing, how do you know you're casting the right vote?" - Radhika Dutt

In this episode of Curated Questions, host Ken Woodward engages entrepreneur and author Radhika Dutt in a profound exploration of how questions can transform organizations from goal-driven to puzzle-solving entities. Radhika is the author of "Radical Product Thinking" and shares her journey from MIT to becoming a serial entrepreneur to developing the puzzle-based leadership OHLA framework (Objectives, Hypotheses, Learnings, Adaptations).

The conversation reveals how traditional goal-setting, rooted in 1940s assembly-line thinking, fails in today's complex environment, where creative problem-solving matters more than repetitive execution.

Radhika demonstrates through a live experiment how "puzzles" energize while "goals" burden, explaining that puzzles tap into internal motivation rather than external pressure. She emphasizes the critical importance of reflection, a practice she credits with enabling better decision-making both personally and professionally.

Drawing from her nine languages and global experience, including living in post-apartheid South Africa, Radhika offers insights on creating psychological safety for questions across cultures. The episode culminates with practical guidance on implementing puzzle-based thinking in organizations, showing how asking better questions leads to ownership, engagement, and transformative results.

This Curated Questions episode can be found on all major platforms and at CuratedQuestions.com.

Keep questioning!

Read more

tags: Curated Questions, Ken Woodward, Radhika Dutt, goals vs puzzles, OKRs, puzzle thinking, radical product thinking, reflection practice, psychological safety, leadership development, asking better questions, problem framing, product strategy, curiosity mindset, organizational learning, decision making, innovation leadership, team culture, effective questioning, corporate transformation, AI product slop, strategic reflection, business innovation, human-centered leadership, continuous learning, team engagement, adaptive leadership, complex problem solving, mindset shift, product leadership
categories: Leadership, Mental Wellness, Personal Growth, Creative Thinking, Innovation
Wednesday 12.03.25
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

Powered by Squarespace.