Education
University of Florida.
University of Florida.
He founded several companies including ePrize, an interactive promotion agency, where he served as Chief Executive Officer and Executive Chairman. Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Gwendolyn Bounds noted that ePrize is targeted at small businesses that don"t have the resources to do this type of marketing themselves but cautioned that the service is not of the pay-per-sale type. In the latter book he states that the original thought and imagination of jazz performance (in his particular case, playing guitar with his jazz ensemble Guymon Ensley Quintet) are transferable skills for creating value in the business world.
GetAbstract said the book provides "a clear, methodical guide to developing creativity".
His third book, The Road to Reinvention: How to Drive Disruption and Accelerate Transformation, was published May 7, 2014. He is a regular writer for Fast Company, Incorporated.
Magazine, and Forbes. Linkner was one of the speakers at TEDx Detroit in September 2011.
Linkner studied jazz guitar at Berklee College of Music, was an Advertising major as an undergraduate at University of Florida, and holds honorary doctorate degrees from Lawrence Technological University and Walsh College.
He is also Entrepreneur-In-Residence and Adjunct Professor of Applied Creativity at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. On August 30, 2013, Linkner wrote a column for the Detroit Free Press suggesting that Labor Day be retired, repurposed, and renamed Appreciation Day, Passion Day, Kindness Day, or Give Back Day. In an interview with Vanna Le of Forbes magazine, he stated he was optimistic about growth in high technology and innovation in general, with the exception of social media.
In a 2014 article in the New Yorker magazine, Harvard historian Jill Lepore criticized the theory of disruptive innovation as "a theory of change founded on panic, anxiety, and shaky evidence".
Lepore postulates that Linkner advises the aspiring disruptive innovators (in which he invests) that "the world is a terrifying place, moving at a devastating pace". She suggests that Linkner"s "job appears to be to convince a generation of people who want to do good and do well to learn, instead, remorselessness.
Forget rules, obligations, your conscience, loyalty, a sense of the commonweal.".