SEARCH - BEST SELLERS - BLOG - CONTACT US - CUSTOM ORDERS - HELP - HUGE DISCOUNTS - NEWSLETTER
Business Books & Great Ideas
My Account - Order History - Shopping Cart - Log In

August 31, 2007

Two New Fables Break-up Summer Bestsellers Club

Filed under: General Management — Todd Sattersten @ 1:16 pm
Tweet

After a summer of same-old, same-old on the Wall Street Journal Business Bestseller List, two new books appear this week signaling the start to the fall business book season.

Given some of my comments recently, it serves me right that I have to report both titles are business fables. Pat Lencioni returns with his sixth story-based book, titled The Three Signs of a Miserable Job: A Fable for Managers (and Their Employees). The second book, Dream Manager, is from previously published, but new business books Matthew Kelly.

We have had these two books featured, along with Juggling Elephants, on the front page for a couple of weeks, which makes us seem like we can foresee the future (hold the email, we do not have any such ability).

Jack reviewed Dream Manager this month and our new writer Jon gave a nice summary of Three Signs if you are interested in following the crowd to these new books.

Comments Off

Colbert/Keen Bout

Filed under: Information Technology — Todd Sattersten @ 10:43 am
Tweet

Stephen Colbert brought Andrew Keen, author of The Cult of The Amateur, onto to the show last week.

The normal verbal melee ensued:

link for the RSS folks

Comments Off

August 30, 2007

Getting Our Audio More Easily

Filed under: The Company — Todd Sattersten @ 9:18 am
Tweet

Just a little reminder…

We have two easy ways to get our audio podcasts delivered to your computer automatically.

1. You can subscribe to the RSS feed.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/800ceoreadPodcasts

This will notify you when new interviews are posted and many RSS readers will download the mp3 files automatically.

2. You can subscribe through iTunes. Here is the link:

http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=73329501

Once you subscribe, you will see the subscription in your Podcasts section. The audio is automatically downloaded to your iPod when you sync it.

Comments Off

Super Crunching Podcast

Filed under: Uncategorized — Todd Sattersten @ 9:10 am
Tweet

There are 19.3 megabytes of Super Crunching audio just waiting for a listen over on our podcasts blog.

If you prefer text, Newsweek has 511 words on Ian Ayres as well as 1,040 words excerpted from the book.

Jack offered his 537 word endorsement of Super Crunchers last week.

Comments Off

August 29, 2007

Books via camels and mules

Filed under: Misc. — Kate @ 3:08 pm
Tweet

Earlier in August Kevin Kelly blogged a unique book mobile service. Two such services deliver books to the readers in the remote areas of Venezuela (via mule) and Kenya (via camel).
Meet a Venezuelan bibliomula:
mule20mobile.jpg
And a Camel Book Mobile in Kenya:
camellibrary.jpg
These mules and camels are sometimes the only access remote communities have to books. And books are not all they provide. The two organizations that run the book mobiles have big plans for the future.In Venezuela:

As the project grows, it is using the latest technology. Somehow there is already a limited mobile phone signal here, so the organisers are taking advantage of that and equipping the mules with laptops and projectors. The book mules are becoming cyber mules and cine mules. “We want to install wireless modems under the banana plants so the villagers can use the internet,” says Robert Ramirez, the co-ordinator of the university’s Network of Enterprising Rural Schools. “Imagine if people in the poor towns in the valley can e-mail saying how many tomatoes they’ll need next week, or how much celery. The farmers can reply telling them how much they can produce. It’s blending localisation and globalisation.”

Comments Off

Super Crunchers Interview with Ian Ayres

Filed under: Audio — Todd Sattersten @ 12:03 pm
Tweet

In this podcast, I talk with Ian Ayres, author of Super Crunchers: How Thinking by Numbers Is the New Way to Be Smart.

The book is a great survey of how analytical tools are allowing us to reach a whole new set of understandings about how the world works. Netflix uses regression to figure out what movie you may like, as eHarmony does the same for mates. Randomization allows JoAnn Fabrics to figure out if the picture of a sewing machine or a starburst with 20% will work better at getting customer to buy. Governments, medicine and filmmakers are all making use of Super Crunching.

Ian and I talk about tools, the wisdom of crowds, when super crunching doesn’t work, and how he used all of this to improve his book.

[podcast]http://www.800ceoread.com/blog/audio/supercrunchersinterview.mp3[/podcast]

Comments Off

August 28, 2007

Super Crunchers – A Story Continued…

Filed under: Big Ideas,Information Technology — Todd Sattersten @ 9:41 am
Tweet

One story line in Super Crunchers is that of Dick Copaken and his secretive company Epagogix.

Copaken thinks that neural networks can improve scriptwriting in Hollywood. Most of his clients don’t want the world to know what he is doing or that they are paying for it.

Malcolm Gladwell changed that in October 2006 when he made Copaken a subject of his article titled The Forumula: What if you built a machine to predict hit movies? Read the piece. It is brilliant.

Super Crunchers picks up where the article left off.

Epagogix’s neural equations have also let studios figure out how to improve the expected gross of a film. The formula not only tells you what to change but tells you how much more revenue that change is likely to bring in. “One time they gave us a script that just had too many production sites,” Copaken said. “The model told me the audience was going to be losing its place. By moving the action to a single city, we predicted that they would increase revenues and save on production costs.”

Epagogix is now working with an outfit that produces about three to four independent films a year with budgets in the $35-$50 million range. Instead of just reacting to completing scripts, Epagogix will be helping from the get-go. “They want to work with us in a collegial, collaborative fashion,” Copaken explained, “where we will work directly with their writers…in developing the script to optimize the box office.”

Now, Copaken hangs out with agents, studio executives, and even hedge fund managers. The story starts on page 144 and is an update to the original New Yorker piece.

Comments Off

August 27, 2007

Jack Covert Selects: The Dream Manager

Filed under: Book Reviews,Jack Covert Selects,Training and Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 9:08 am
Tweet

The Dream Manager by Matthew Kelly, Hyperion, 176 pages, $19.95 Hardcover,
August 2007, ISBN 9781401303709
Pat Lencioni has created a franchise by writing well-written, easy-to-read fables about business. His books feature subjects like meetings, team building and silos at work. Many authors have tried to duplicate what Lencioni has mastered, but most have been done wretchedly.
But with The Dream Manager, storyteller and inspirational speaker Matthew Kelly has written a book worthy of Lencioni (who also wrote the forward).
First, he presents a warning:

BusinessWeek reports that, over the next ten years, 21 percent of top management and 24 percent of all management jobs across all functions, regions, and industries will become vacant. Add to this trend an aging population, a shrinking workforce, and a growing intolerance for the illegal immigrant population that provides much of the unskilled labor in the United States today, and you have a talent and labor crisis of enormous consequence across all disciplines–from the highly skilled to the completely unskilled.

Kelly addresses this future crisis though his fable about one company’s issue with turnover. The company is a commercial cleaning service. The company has just over 400 employees and a turnover of over 400% per year. The company decides to ask the employees why people are leaving, and are surprised to learn that the main issue is transportation. People simply couldn’t get to work. The company creates a shuttle bus service–which costs them twelve thousand dollars per month–that runs to and from four main areas. The results are immediate. Employee’s attitudes improve and turnover improves by over 400%.
But the company still has 240% turnover after a year and many other problems that cause the company to hemorrhage revenue. In confronting the reality that an undedicated workforce has an effect on the bottom line, senior management suspects that the problem may be that the employees don’t see a future for themselves. They are living every day just to survive. In other words, they have no dreams. After much wrangling, they create a position called “Dream Manager,” whose sole job is to meet with the employees and help them think about and realize their dreams. These dreams range from owning a house to learning English.
After three years of the Dream Manager Program, the company finds the amount of sick time people took is down 83% and lateness was no longer an issue. The amount of cleaning materials used declined as the employees got more efficient. The book, of course, has a final chapter called “Getting Started–Applications and Tools,” so you can “try this at home,” just as we will here at 800-CEO-READ.

Comments Off

August 25, 2007

links for 2007-08-25

Filed under: Uncategorized — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:17 am
Tweet
  • No Man’s Land >> Inc. Magazine | “Welcome to No Man’s Land”
    “Welcome to No Man’s Land. Few firms make it to the other side. But it doesn’t have to be that way. A conversation with Doug Tatum.”
    (tags: businessbooks smallbusiness entrepreneurship growth)
  • How Life Imitates Chess >> Portfolio Magazine | Garry’s Gambit
    If retired jocks can write insprational books, I see no reason to exclude retired chess luminaries from the field of management advice, and perhaps xecutives will find Kasparov’s prescriptions useful.
    (tags: management)
  • More Books to Read >> Portfolio Magazine | Also Worth Read…
    Extraordinary Circumstances, Super Crunchers, Golfing on the Roof of the World, A Demon of Our Own Design, The Clarks of Cooperstown, Confessions of a Wall Street Shoeshine Boy, Power Play
    (tags: bigidea biography fiction)
  • Deluxe >> New York Times Book Reviw | Devil Sells Prada
    Hijacked, over the past two or three decades, by corporate profiteers with a “single-minded focus on profitability,” the luxury industry has “sacrificed its integrity, undermined its products, tarnished its history and hoodwinked its consumers.”
    (tags: industry)
Comments Off

August 24, 2007

The Value of a Good Story

Filed under: Book Reviews — Aaron @ 11:30 am
Tweet

How many times have you retold a good story? Likewise, can you recite the notes you took at last week’s meeting? I am betting that’s a bit more difficult. Without getting into a lot of psychology, cognitive learning theory, and memory discussion, I think most can agree that a good story sticks. We use our imaginations to create visual scenes and characters, and getting to “know” these people and places, the things those characters do and think, and the places they happen in, plays a huge role in our understanding of the ideas involved. By involving our imagination in the process, we actively apply these events to our own lives and experiences.
Patrick Lencioni’s new book, The Three Signs of a Miserable Job is a fable. It also has a condensed version of the main points of the book at the back, after the story. I’ve debated with folks in the office about this format. Some wonder, “Why have the fable at all?” implying that the author should have only published these main, concise points, so that managers and executives can digest them, apply them, and move on.
There’s a point there, certainly. But here’s where I see the bigger picture, and Lencioni’s smart application of the content. The subtitle of the book is “A Fable for Managers (and their employees).” Lencioni presents a well-written, interesting, and relatable story that teaches managers some (not so new, but important) principles about management, but he also tells the general employee a good story about analyzing their workplace and their role within it. How many people right now are living in the same complacent, go-nowhere world that Lencioni describes with some of the characters in his book? Probably more than we’d like to think. Reading this story could help people understand the positive changes that could take place, those hopeful possibilities. They might have a conversation with their manager they never would have had previously. The book might even make them consider their purpose, identify their goals, and work toward a higher position in order to accomplish some of these new ideas they’ve learned. Or, it might make them realize that it’s time to look elsewhere. After all, life is short, and we spend more time at work than anywhere else. But, you’d never consider this if you figured things were the same everywhere, and that your skills would never take you beyond your current position.
Likewise, how many managers think they’re doing what their superiors expect of them, but are really missing the mark in the grand scheme of things – for themselves, their employees, and their companies? This book clearly addresses that issue, and explains the solution, through examples and insight – cause and effect scenarios of everyday business life that all can identify with, no matter the size of your firm.
I think there exists a stereotype that only business people read business books. But there are a lot of people who work at businesses that see themselves separate from this group. With Three Signs, Lencioni offers a book that everyone can benefit from: managers, CEOs, and general employees who are hopefully still looking for ways to make their lives better. It’s these types of books that can take business thought beyond the typical audience, and inspire the minds of a much broader range of the workforce. I don’t mean to imply that the book is fluff, either. Writing a story involves more work and creativity than reporting facts and data, and Lencioni does both here, quite well. Managers should appreciate this – a book that their whole team can learn from, themselves included.
But, if you feel the fable is too much for you to read, simply head to the back of the book, and get your quick fix of insightful business ideas. For those of you who take this route, you’re missing out on a great opportunity to exercise your imagination – a point the book strongly demonstrates the benefit of in content and format.

Comments Off
Older Posts »




  • Categories
    • 100 Best (89)
    • Advertising (18)
    • Ask 8cr! (22)
    • Audio (115)
    • Bestsellers (4)
    • Big Ideas (137)
    • Blog (524)
    • Book Awards (69)
    • Book Reviews (190)
    • Careers (40)
    • ChangeThis (52)
    • Communication (76)
    • Current Events (82)
    • Customer Service (34)
    • Design (34)
    • Entrepreneurship (1)
    • Events (20)
    • Excerpts and Essays (334)
    • Fables (1)
    • Finance and Economics (82)
    • Friday Links (77)
    • General Business (186)
    • General Management (243)
    • Global Business (74)
    • Guest Post (7)
    • History and Biographies (96)
    • Human Resources/Organizational Development (98)
    • In the Books (4)
    • InBubbleWrap (22)
    • Information Technology (69)
    • Innovation (105)
    • International Bestsellers (28)
    • Internet (19)
    • Interviews (12)
    • Jack Covert Selects (579)
    • Jack's Thoughts (38)
    • Leadership (148)
    • Lists (164)
    • Marketing (290)
    • Misc. (286)
    • New Releases (28)
    • Newsletter (2)
    • Personal Development (178)
    • Personal Finance and Investing (40)
    • Public Relations (7)
    • Publishing Industry (175)
    • Quotations (104)
    • Retail (18)
    • Safety, Health, and Wellness (14)
    • Sales (64)
    • Small Business (48)
    • Social Responsibilty (39)
    • Start-ups (76)
    • Strategy (87)
    • Technology (5)
    • The 100 Best (13)
    • The Company (139)
    • Thought Leaders (15)
    • Training and Development (11)
    • Uncategorized (556)
  • Meta
    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org



 
800 CEO Read - Daily Blog - 100 Best Business Books - SapientSoftwareSolutions - In Bubble Wrap - My Favorite Business Book
© 800-CEO-READ (800)-236-7323