After sitting with Roger Spitz’s Disrupt with Impact a little longer, what stays with me is not just the book’s command of modern disruption. It is the steadiness of the voice behind it.
Spitz writes about uncertainty without sounding intoxicated by it. That is rarer than it should be. Too many books in this category either catastrophize the future or try to dominate it rhetorically. This one does something more useful. It asks what kind of thinking survives change.
That gives the book a broader audience than the business shelf might suggest. Yes, it is for leaders, founders, and strategists. But it is also for readers interested in how people respond when the world refuses to stay still.
I still think the practical value is real. The frameworks are clear. The examples are strong. But what makes the book memorable is its refusal to posture.
That alone makes it worth revisiting.
Get your copy: Read Disrupt with Impact on Amazon