-
Share and connect via book recommendations.
-
The story of how Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard [author of Let My People Go Surfing] took his passion for the outdoors and turned it into an amazing business.
March 30, 2007
links for 2007-03-30
March 29, 2007
You're Already a Citizen Marketer
The second event in our LeaveSmarter Series took place last Thursday afternoon. We’re crazy busy around here (just ask inBubbleGuy) so we haven’t had a chance to blog about it, but we’d be remiss not to mention how enjoyable Ben McConnell’s presentation was. He even took a few technical glitches in stride, showing off his shiny red sneakers to keep the momentum going.
One of the strongest messages I took away from the event is just how powerful social media are. Ben showed us some pretty cool (and, in a few instances, kind of scary) examples of the videos, blogs, and other online content that citizen marketers are creating. I particularly liked the fan version of Shakira’s “Hips Don’t Lie” music video.
Using our nametags as a talking point, we shared with each other the products and services we’re citizen marketers for. For instance, I wrote down Sala da Pranzo, a great little Italian restaurant on Milwaukee’s East Side. inBubbleGuy promoted the bacon-wrapped water chestnuts we provided –one of the driving attractions to the series. Todd talked about More Space.
The name tag idea was Ben and Jackie’s, and I highly recommend it as a way to get people mingling at your next event. Speaking of the next event, we would love to see you at our final LeaveSmarter event on May 16. Nikos has a powerful message that we’re sure will bring this season to an inspiring end.
We’ll have some photos from the event up on our Flickr site very soon.
links for 2007-03-29
-
The strength of Mr. Buckingham’s book is its philosophical base in the late Peter Drucker’s classic admonition: “The effective executive makes strength productive. He knows that one cannot build on weakness.”
March 28, 2007
Shout out from Seth
ChangeThis got a nice mention on Seth Godin’s blog today. He has a really great entry up about how you can benefit from publishing an e-book. Here’s a direct link to the post:
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2007/03/you_should_writ.html
I feel compelled to boast a little bit about ChangeThis (since I’ve only been here for a few months and it still fascinates me). Seth Godin conceived of the project in 2003. In the summer of 2005, 800-CEO-READ took over managing the site. We have a great editor, and we’re seeing record downloads. It seems like the ChangeThis reader community is growing each month. If you’ve never been over to the site and are wondering what it is, here’s a blurb from the FAQs:
ChangeThis is a new kind of media. It’s calm and thoughtful and direct and transparent. And unlike almost every other form of media, it reaches people through community. If an idea is a good one, it’ll spread, because people like you will send it to their friends. Unlike a broadcaster, we’re not using FCC frequencies to send our ideas to people who don’t want to hear them.
Unlike a book or a newspaper, it’s free. And there are no ads.
I really like this explanation of why we’re doing this:
Because we’re tired of the yelling, tired of the irrational posturing, and tired of the lies. We decided to do something about all three. Our bet is that smart people will embrace being talked to with respect and will spread the word.
We have no secret plan. No ulterior motive. We wanted to see if it would work. The fact that you’re reading this sort of implies it did, at least a little.
Check it out. And thanks, Seth, for the shout out.
Hot Spots spark innovation
A few days ago we posted an excerpt from the book Ignited. Here’s an excerpt from a February Financial Times article that reviewed Lynda Gratton’s new book, Hot Spots: Why Some Teams, Workplaces, And Organizations Buzz With Energy – And Others Don’t, another “hot” title this spring:
But, if you are lucky, you may also spot the occasional flash of orange or red. These are “hot spots” – “a moment when people are working together in exceptionally creative and collaborative ways . . . Hot spots occur when the energy within and between people flares – when mundane everyday activities are set aside for engaged work that is exciting and challenging. It is at times like these that ideas become contagious and new possibilities appear.”
Gratton has not branched out from her distinguished career studying management to dabble in meteorology. The “hot spots” are an extended metaphor, but one that is soundly based on a body of academic research into networks, teams,culture, collaboration and creativity.
The author brings up examples like the communities that build Linux, Nokia, and Goldman Sachs to illustrate the fact that even groups with far-flung members can feed on one another’s energy to spark innovation.
Gratton has written a succinct and utterly compelling book. She is really a kind of one-woman hot spot in herself.
Check out the article: “Creative sparks warm up a business ice age” by Stefan Stern.
www.ft.com, February 28 2007.
links for 2007-03-28
-
“The majority of products in most companies are cash traps – they will absorb more forever than they will generate,” declare James Andrew and Harold Sirkin, senior innovation and operations experts at the Boston Consulting Group and the authors of Payba
March 27, 2007
2006 Bestsellers (a little late)
Some folks started asking us for the 2006 bestsellers. Some how we forgot to do this right after the New Year, and I know many of you are dying to hear the results.
One note on methodology: We award points to a book’s position on our monthly list, as well as the number of months it appears on our lists.
Without further ado…
800-CEO-READ’s 2006 Best-Selling Books
- It’s Your Ship by Michael Abrashoff (Warner Business)
- The Ultimate Question by Fred Reichheld (Harvard Business School Press)
- Blue Ocean Strategy by W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne (Harvard Business School Press)
- Dealing With Darwin by Geoffrey Moore (Portfolio)
- The Ice Cream Maker by Subir Chowdhury (Currency)
- Blueprint To A Billion by David Thomson (Wiley)
- I’ve Seen A Lot Of Famous People Naked, And They’ve Got Nothing On You! by Jake Steinfeld (AMACOM)
- If Harry Potter Ran General Electric by Tom Morris (Currency)
- One Billion Customers by James MacGregor (Free Press)
- Ten Rules for Strategic Innovators by Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble (Harvard Business School Press)
- Satisfaction by Chris Denove and James D. Power IV (Portfolio)
- Treasure Hunt by Michael Silverstein and John Butman (Portfolio)
- Redefining Healthcare by Michael Porter and Elizabeth Olmsted Teisberg (Harvard Business School Press)
- The Power to Predict by Vivek Ranadive (McGraw-Hill)
- The Millionaire Real Estate Mindset by Russ Whitney (Currency)
- More Than 85 Broads by Janet Hanson (McGraw-Hill)
- Don’t Retire, Rewire by Jeri Sedlar and Rick Miners (Alpha Books)
- Make Money, Not Excuses by Jeam Chatzky (Crown)
- Inside Every Woman by Vickie Milazzo (Wiley)
- The Cycle of Leadership by Noel Tichy with Nancy Cardwell (Collins)
- The Big Moo by The Group of 33, edited by Seth Godin (Portfolio)
- Small Is The New Big by Seth Godin (Portfolio)
- The Long Tail by Chris Anderson (Hyperion)
- Breaking The Bamboo Ceiling by Jane Hyun (Collins)
- Seven Secrets of Great Entrepreneurial Masters by Allen Fishman (McGraw-Hill)
March 26, 2007
Excerpt from Ignited
Ignited
Managers! Light Up Your Company and Career
This excerpt is taken from Ignited: Managers! Light Up Your Company and Career by Vince Thompson.
Chapter 9
Ignition Point 4: The Landscape
The Power of the Scout
One of the most common tendencies of any business is to become inward-focused. It’s also one of the most deadly. “Navel-gazing” may be all right for Zen students who want to tune out the world and become more connected with their inner, spiritual essence. But companies that spend too much time navel-gazing are so enamored with and fascinated by themselves–their brilliantly-designed processes, their wonderful corporate culture, their admirable history, their fabulous products and services–that they gradually
lose sight of the purpose of it all: serving customers.
It’s understandable that this should happen. As a company grows, an increasing degree of self-consciousness is necessary and important. Managers need to take time to reflect on how the company operates, to develop systems that are adaptive and flexible, and to massage the culture so that positive traits are encouraged and negative traits are squashed. All of this requires some self-analysis. A company that can’t perform such inward-focused analysis is doomed to grow willy-nilly, ending up with structures that
make little sense and often don’t work.
Furthermore, with increasing size comes growing complexity, which inevitably requires rules, standardization, and internal systems of communication. When a company has 6 or 12 or even 50 employees, ideas, strategies, plans, and methods can be shared by osmosis. Get much bigger, and you need ways of making sure that everyone is in the loop and on the same page. Such dreaded phenomena as the weekly staff meeting, the company newsletter, the procedures manual, and even (horrors!) the Human Resources department all
come into being. Software systems to organize and link the multiplying parts of the company become increasingly complicated and important.With these phenomena comes a staff of people–small at first, but growing over time–to create, administer, and maintain them.
Here is where the risk of navel-gazing arises. As soon as internal systems become important elements in your company’s functioning, one or two or a handful of your people will get the mistaken impression that they are the most important elements. These people become “keepers of the systems,
New Excerpt on Excerpts Blog!
We have a new excerpt up on the ol’ excerpts blog. It’s Chapter 9 from Ignited by Vince Thompson.
There comes a point when it’s time for those in leadership to light a fire under every uninspired and discouraged group. Ignited is for middle managers who need an outline of clear, realistic steps to promote change within an organization.
In Chapter 9, Thompson talks about the common tendency to become inward-focused. He suggests that one step toward reshaping an organization is scouting The Landscape–the external influences on our world, customers, and competition.
Here’s a direct link to the excerpt:
http://800ceoread.com/excerpts/archives/006854.html
links for 2007-03-26
-
…presents not only a comprehensive account of Europe’s postwar economic experience but also an important analysis of capitalist development more generally.
