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

October 31, 2007

We Are Smarter Than Me on Morning Edition

Filed under: Human Resources/Organizational Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 3:33 pm
Tweet

Tomorrow, Thursday, morning, Barry Libert and Jon Spector will be on NPR’s Morning Edition to talk about We Are Smarter Than Me. It starts at 8:50 ET.
Tune in tomorrow. If you miss it, it will be archived on the website: www.npr.org

Comments Off

Our turn to yodel.

Filed under: Misc. — Kate @ 3:28 pm
Tweet

We’re yodeling back to The Inside Flap. For all of the literary buffs out there, The Inside Flap is all about books — fiction, non-fiction, anything that catches the eye of the crew at our sister company. If you’re not familiar with them, their Milwaukee’s own independent string of bookstores. A lot of great finds are over on their blog.
And related to business books, they’re bringing in Sarah Miller Caldicott, co-author of Innovate Like Edison into Milwaukee on Tuesday, November 27th for a free book event. Find an excerpt of the book here. And if you’re in town, we’d love to see you there.
And, thanks to Richard for linking to our podcasts! Over at eContent you’ll find more links to podcasts with business authors. Including Richard Ogle author of Smart World, C.K. Prahalad of Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, Charles Fishman of the Wal-Mart Effect and lots more.

Comments Off

On Strategy: Paralyzing Fear

Filed under: Human Resources/Organizational Development — Kate @ 3:05 pm
Tweet

One trend that has come up in various conversations I’ve had lately has been the barriers to productivity. There are, of course, the literal barriers of corporate red tape, financing and other practical matters. I also had an invigorating conversation earlier this week about weaknesses as barriers with Dave over at The Freak Factor. Dave’s a champion for acknowledging weaknesses and finding the right context to use them to foster productivity.
Another barrier to productivity is fear. I think one of the things we fear is innovation. And I’m not speaking of the changes that come with it. More so the literal shaking in your boots over the decision of what step to take next.
We live in an innovative world. Millions of ideas are accessible at our fingertips. It’s easy to become overwhelmed by the influx of new ideas (think 6,000 business books are published each year). Sometimes too many ideas can become paralyzing.
Paralysis is Dan and Chip’s message in their latest Fast Company piece [side note: I highly recommend checking out the Heath brothers' book if you haven't already].
A simple strategy can breath life into a paralytic state, making decisions relatively easy to make. Simplicity allows people to act, say Dan and Chip. Take an Australian Credit Union:

Even a one-liner can ease paralysis. The scrappy Savings & Loans Credit Union in Adelaide, Australia, has an internal strategic motto: “We don’t want to be first but we sure as hell don’t want to be third.” The strategy is to stand back and let the first mover take the risk and grab the glory of innovation, then come in right behind and make a copy that’s crisper than the original. The lessons for employees are clear. Constantly scan the environment for good ideas. Don’t be first, be best. Look for new employees who are good, quick executors, not creative pioneers. And reserve the incentives for people who are improvers, not inventors.

Paralysis is caused by fear. A simple strategy can help reduce some of the fear and ambiguity associated with any decision. One spot to go for helping define strategy is the book Purpose. From Todd:

Nikos’ thesis is four types of purpose matter for the business/competitive world. There are the discoverers who thrive finding the new. There are the helpers who are believe the world is a better place when those around them are happy. The strivers believe in excellence above all else. Heroes are the larger than life companies change the course of history, for better or worse.

For us, it’s about being helpful. Everything we do is built around being helpful to authors, publishers, readers and businesses. That’s built into our strategy and everything we do runs past that litmus test.
For Costco, it’s about saving people money. For Apple, it’s about being innovative. What’s your strategy?
[As a side note here, a friend of mine sent me a post from Kathy Sierra on fear the other day. It's an older post as Kathy stopped writing awhile back. It's on understanding fear and overcoming it. Worth a look.]

Comments Off

Save your money, forget school…Here is what business is

Filed under: General Business — Jack @ 8:37 am
Tweet

From The HP Way, is the best description of what “Business” is:

At Hewlett-Packard (and other companies as well), people, materials, facilities, money, and time are the resources available to us for conducting our business. By applying our skills, we turn these resources into useful products and services. If we do a good job, customers pay us more for our products than the sum of our costs in producing and distributing them. This difference, our profit, represents the value we add to the resources we utilize.

Now you know how its done!

Comments Off

links for 2007-10-31

Filed under: Uncategorized — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:18 am
Tweet
  • From Higher Aims to Hired Hands >> BusinessWeek | “Are B-Schools a Blight on the Land?”
    Khurana’s From Higher Aims to Hired Hands is an important and surprisingly disparaging look at business-school education in the U.S. from the late 19th century to the present.
    (tags: businessbooks current_affairs education)
Comments Off

October 30, 2007

Essay from the author of The Taboos of Leadership

Filed under: Leadership — 800-CEO-READ @ 7:43 am
Tweet

Today we’re happy to host an essay by Dr. Anthony F. Smith, author of The Taboos of Leadership, a book that “reveals the rarely discussed realities of leadership–the secrets that leaders just cannot admit to publicly for fear of losing power, self-respect, or even their jobs.”
Thank you, Anthony!
Leadership – The One and Only Path to Becoming a Leader
People have paid me a lot of money over the years to answer the following
question for them: How do I become a great Leader? I will often answer them
with the following questions:
Q: How do you become a great parent?
A: Do great parenting, day in, day out, over a sustained period of time.
Q: How do you become a great consultant?
A: Do great consulting, day in, day out, etc.
So, how do you become a great Leader? You guessed it, do great Leadership, day in, day out, over a sustained period of time!
The field of Leadership Development, with its plethora of books, seminars, courses, videos, and executive coaches, has become a billion dollar industry. Unfortunately, I believe that much of what is embodied within the industry is simply misleading and deceptive. Books such as ‘Leadership for Dummies’, ‘The Idiots Guide to Leading’, and ‘Leadership Made Easy’, all capitalize on the fact that many want to be a leader, but few are actually able, or want to put forth the effort required to really become one. (How would you feel about a book entitled “Brain Surgery for Dummies”?) At one
point, we need to get real about leadership. Like diet programs that claim you can eat all you want and still lose 20 pounds in a week, leadership “products”, make similar claims, and therefore resort to oversimplified theories and falsehoods that invite leader want-to-be’s to consume anything that looks like a magic pill to Leadership.
Well, unfortunately, there are no magic pills to becoming a Leader, just like there are no magic pills to losing weight, getting fit, making a million dollars, or shaving 10 strokes off your handicap in golf. Simply stated, becoming a Leader occurs when one
exercises the arduous process of effective Leadership, day after day, week after week, and year after year.
Q: So, what is Leadership you ask?
A: Leadership is a process (not a position) whereby an individual works through a series of iterative stages by;

Stage 1
* creating a vision,
* establishing an objective and set of goals,
* setting direction,
Stage 2
* and following through by intentionally seeking to influence followers (both established and potential),
* to perform the various tasks needed to realize the vision,
* to their full potential,
* for as long as possible,
Stage 3
* until the vision and goals are realized.

One can look at this definition as a “check-list” to Leadership; Do I have a vision; a picture of a desired end state that is compelling to others? Are people performing to their full potential? Who do I need to help me realize this vision? Am I intentionally seeking to influence people to perform their best? What else needs to be done, and who should do it?
Now, I realize individuals may find themselves at various points in a given stage, before they choose to engage in the process of leadership. For instance, one may be working in a division, or an organization, that already has a clearly established vision, set goals, etc. In such a case, assuming that the individual agrees with the vision, the leadership process begins at Stage 2. We all must realize that part of the difficulty of leadership is that some people are great visionaries, but lack the competence and EQ to influence others to rally around their vision. Others, may not be great visionaries, but are very influential and inspirational to those around them.
What I have observed in my years of studying leaders, is that very few have all the gifts and talents themselves; what many of the great ones do have, is a self awareness of what talents they do have, and the self confidence and security to surround themselves with others who can compliment them, and compensate for their own lack of skills.
In closing, let me make one point clear; it is my intent to encourage as many people as possible to exercise leadership as often as they possibly can, for as long as they can!
When people are lost because they lack a “vision”, and you happen to “see” an end goal that they can not see, then at least exercise Stage 1 of leadership. By doing so, it doesn’t necessarily mean you will emerge as their “leader”, but you will have engaged in “leadership.” If one of your colleagues is not performing to their “full potential”, intervene and intentionally try to influence them to raise their performance. Remember, human performance is nothing more than the function of one’s skill and will to perform a task; therefore, if one is not performing to their potential, it is either because they lack the skill, or the will, to do their job. Figure out what is impeding their performance and try to either coach them to build their skills, or inspire, challenge, and motivate them to raise their will to perform. Let’s be clear;
Everyone can not become a leader, but every one can engage in a lot more leadership!
When I wrote my book, The Taboos of Leadership; The Ten Secrets That No One Will Tell You About Leaders and What They Really Think (Jossey Bass, 2007), I was accused by some that by “revealing” the un-savory aspects of leadership, I was discouraging many from wanting to lead. Unfortunately, they missed my message. As I state in my book, if we are serious about trying to build the Skill and Will of future leaders, we owe it to them to disclose the truth, as difficult as they may be, so that they may be better prepared to engage in leadership, day in, and day out, over a sustained period of time, thus increasing the probability that one day they will indeed become great leaders themselves.
Leadership is the one and only path to becoming a leader.

Comments Off

October 29, 2007

Hudson Booksellers Best Books of 2007

Filed under: Publishing Industry — dylan @ 11:56 am
Tweet

With 66 bookstores in airports all over North America, you may know Hudson Booksellers from your travels. They have now decided that it is time to help busy travelers select the books they sell, announcing their picks of the best books of 2007. It’s a pretty long list, with selections in the fields of fiction, non-fiction, children’s, and–aha!–business! The business titles selected are:

* Five Minds for the Future by Howard Gardner
* Microtrends by Mark Penn
* The No Asshole Rule by Robb Sutton
* The Black Swan by Nasim Nicholas Taleb
* Wikinomics by Don Tapscott

You’ll notice two of the books, Wikinomics and The Black Swan, were also on the FT/Goldman Sachs Award shortlist, and The No Asshole Rule won The Quill Award in the business category. I think it’s a great idea to put this list out, and the categories here should cater well to different kinds of travelers. They even offer two additional categories to extend the list for more voracious readers. One is called “Books We Love”, and the other is “Newsworthy/Noteworthy”. If you’d like to see the titles in the other categories, you can find it on their website. You should also begin seeing the list posted in their stores beginning December 1st.

Comments Off

Ask 8cr! – Momentum

Filed under: Ask 8cr! — Aaron @ 9:55 am
Tweet

Ask 8cr! – Momentum
Welcome to “Ask 8cr!” – a new section of our blog where we’ve created a forum to find out what kinds of issues and challenges people are having in the workplace. We then take these issues and apply a business book we feel offers a viable solution. Others then chime in via the comments section. The person with the selected challenge gets a free copy of the book, but everyone who reads these posts, wins. Do you have a challenge at work? Send it to me at jon(a)800ceoread(dot)com.
Today’s challenge deals with getting momentum back. Here’s a note from one of our readers:
My biggest challenge right now is staying motivated now that I’ve crushed all my professional and personal objectives. Work has lost its zest. I find myself going though the motions and I gotta ask…how long before I lose my edge? How long before I go from the golden boy to the has-been? What can I do to keep it interesting now that I’m on top (and actually have the time and resources to try something new)? – Curt
This note from Curt really struck me. His questions almost imply a self-fulfilling prophecy. There are a ton of books in both the business and self-help categories that address staying inspired and focused, but one came across my desk recently that I feel is timely, and is co-authored by someone who surely has found ways to keep going, stay in the limelight, and exude an intense amount of momentum.

Donald Trump and Bill Zanker have written a book called, Think Big and Kick Ass in Business and Life. Now, despite what you think of Trump, the guy’s done a lot, and just keeps on going. In this book, Trump and Zanker pen a chapter that addresses Curt’s challenge: “Big Mo!” “Big Mo” is momentum, and Trump begins by telling a story of one-time real estate guru William Levitt – a man who literally had it all and lost everything, simply because he lost his momentum. When Trump met him (post-momentum), he learned the big lesson that losing your momentum means losing everything; for without it, you’re done. He states, “The funny thing about momentum: when you stop, it stops” and, addressing his own moment of questions similar to Curt, “All I ever saw were the good times. I thought it would always be that way. Over those sixteen booming years I had always been intent on one thing: building bigger and bigger momentum. Then I stopped.” Trump’s work lost its zest; he was going through the motions. Did he lose his edge? The answer, we all know, is no. But, what did he do?

“One way to keep your momentum going is to keep giving yourself greater and greater challenges. It is also important to give your knowledge and insight freely to anyone who asks. I believe people absorb more efficiently and faster when they learn by doing, and I am intent on giving people the knowledge they need to succeed. I give two hour speeches at The Learning Annex Wealth Expos for the same purpose, and I donate a large portion of my speaking fees to charity. To keep your momentum going you must have intrinsic values as well as monetary values, and you must recognize when it is time to start giving back.” – Donald Trump

Co-author Bill Zanker adds: “Latch onto a business trend that has great momentum. Then partner with others to set big goals and let the momentum lead you to higher and higher levels.”
This is merely one chapter of a kick-in-the-pants book to get all of us fired up about our business. The rest of the book is filled with equally blunt, yet insightful experiences of the man who’s recently become best known for his “accountability” (a nice way to coin his “You’re Fired!”). The book also features an appendix filled with a variety of resources: best of Q&A, true stories from others, must reads, and more. Give this book to any entrepreneur and watch them explode. I’m sending a copy to Curt, and am excited to hear about how it changes his perspective, and gives him back the passion to create new challenges for himself.

Comments Off

Jack Covert Selects – Life's a Pitch

Filed under: Communication,Jack Covert Selects — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:40 am
Tweet

Life’s a Pitch: How to Be Businesslike With Your Emotional Life and Emotional With Your Business Life by Stephen Bayley & Roger Mavity, Bantam Press, 256 pages, £14.99, Paperback, March 2007, ISBN 9780593056431
Most of us tend to think of our business and personal lives as two separate lives, and to a large extent, this is true. We all strive for a sense of fulfillment at home and in the workplace, and most of us want some separation and balance between the two worlds. Regardless of how successfully we keep our personal and professional lives separate, some of the skills we use in each are the same. Life’s a Pitch addresses these similarities. It is actually two separate books bound together and written by two authors. Both books are about presentation, or how to make a pitch, but they approach the subject from different angles.
Roger Mavity wrote the first book, a more traditional business book. He gets into the nuts and bolts of how to organize yourself and your team, set the message you want to deliver, and how to present that message most effectively. He argues that people respond more to emotion than logic, and that how you pitch yourself is more important than what you’re pitching. To put it simply, a pitch is theatre, not information. Stephen Bayley’s book, the second part of Life’s a Pitch, is far more provocative. He writes about how to present–or “pitch”–yourself in your personal life. He sees life itself as theatre, and writes on how to “design your personality” to be a better actor in it.
They both approach the subject bluntly, some may even say ruthlessly (they dedicate the book to Niccolò Machiavelli, and write that his “ruthless understanding of personal ambition has inspired us both”) but they deal with it honestly. They deal openly with topics most of us would prefer to keep at arms length. Bayley references Gandhi and Patton as good examples of presentation in two consecutive sentences, which is bound to make people of all temperaments wince. Similarly, Mavity talks about how the Mafia calls itself a “family” while the British royal family refers to itself as “the firm.” This book is more interested in broadening our view of presentation than playing to our prejudices of it. Pacifist and warrior are treated on equal footing here. All that matters is the pitch.
Most of all, this book is well-written and intelligent. Everybody who reads it is bound to get something out of it, whether it is how to make a presentation in a boardroom or how to present yourself at lunch. This book is what it preaches: a great pitch.

Comments Off

October 26, 2007

Friday Links

Filed under: Friday Links — 800-CEO-READ @ 2:41 pm
Tweet

And now for our third installment of Friday Links!
*Rob at Business Pundit has written an introverts guide to selling.
*Robert Austin at Harvard Business School discusses the business of classical music with Martha Lagace.
*Do you work at home and miss the creative impetus of working around like-minded people? Co-Working may be the perfect solution.
*Check out this slideshow of how Trek is re-inventing the wheel (well, the entire bicycle, actually).
*Also, thanks to Dan Heath, coauthor of one of our favorite books, for pointing us to Dave Randall’s post about the upside of rejection.
* And since we’re in the midst of the World Series, how about something on the economics of baseball with The Hardball Times’ 2007 Net Win Shares Value.
: : : : :
Enjoy your weekends everyone!

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