Dave Raley

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Dave Raley

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June 2021


Dave Raley is the founder of Imago Consulting, an advisory firm that helps organizations create growth through innovation. As a speaker and advisor, he has inspired thousands of nonprofit leaders to grow both personally and organizationally. He’s the author of The Rise of Sustainable Giving: How the Subscription Economy is Transforming Recurring Giving, and What Nonprofits Can Do to Benefit. Dave also writes a weekly innovation and leadership column called The Wave Report, and he’s the co-founder of the Purpose & Profit Podcast – a show about the ideas at the intersection of nonprofit causes and for-profit brands.

Average rating: 4.63 · 8 ratings · 3 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
The Rise of Sustainable Giv...

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Practicing the Wa...
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Dave Raley is now friends with Gordon Diver
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The Treasure Principle by Randy Alcorn
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Thank You for Arguing by Jay Heinrichs
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Dream Chasing by Bob Weis
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Bandersnatch by Diana Pavlac Glyer
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The Generosity Crisis by Nathan Chappell
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The Generosity Crisis by Nathan Chappell
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The Biblical Fundraiser in Modern Practice by Russell James III
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The Power of Generosity by Dave Toycen
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More of Dave's books…
David   Epstein
“The challenge we all face is how to maintain the benefits of breadth, diverse experience, interdisciplinary thinking, and delayed concentration in a world that increasingly incentivizes, even demands, hyperspecialization”
David Epstein, Range: How Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

Steven Johnson
“Good ideas may not want to be free, but they do want to connect, fuse, recombine. They want to reinvent themselves by crossing conceptual borders. They want to complete each other as much as they want to compete”
Steven Johnson, Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation

Walter Isaacson
“In addition to his instinct for discerning patterns across disciplines, Leonardo honed two other traits that aided his scientific pursuits: an omnivorous curiosity, which bordered on the fanatical, and an acute power of observation, which was eerily intense. Like much with Leonardo, these were interconnected. Any person who puts “Describe the tongue of the woodpecker” on his to-do list is overendowed with the combination of curiosity and acuity. His curiosity, like that of Einstein, often was about phenomena that most people over the age of ten no longer puzzle about: Why is the sky blue? How are clouds formed? Why can our eyes see only in a straight line? What is yawning? Einstein said he marveled about questions others found mundane because he was slow in learning to talk as a child. For Leonardo, this talent may have been connected to growing up with a love of nature while not being overly schooled in received wisdom.”
Walter Isaacson, Leonardo Da Vinci

Walter Isaacson
“Those who are in love with practice without theoretical knowledge are like the sailor who goes onto a ship without rudder or compass and who never can be certain whither he is going,” he wrote in 1510. “Practice must always be founded on sound theory.”11”
Walter Isaacson, Leonardo da Vinci

Walter Isaacson
“That goes a step too far, I think. Leonardo did not invent the scientific method, nor did Aristotle or Alhazen or Galileo or any Bacon. But his uncanny abilities to engage in the dialogue between experience and theory made him a prime example of how acute observations, fanatic curiosity, experimental testing, a willingness to question dogma, and the ability to discern patterns across disciplines can lead to great leaps in human understanding.”
Walter Isaacson, Leonardo da Vinci




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