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

March 31, 2009

Why Read A Book, When An Article Might Do

Filed under: 100 Best,Book Reviews — Todd Sattersten @ 10:29 am
Tweet

We got a note last week from a reader who was a little upset by a new product that Harvard Business Publishing recently put out.

Titled “10 Must-Read Articles from HBR“, the electronic-only download highlights many of the same authors (and seminal ideas) as we did in The 100 Best. You’ll find Drucker, Christensen, Goleman, Kotter among others with the Harvard Business Review article (ie condensed versions) of The Effective Executive, Innovator’s Dilemma, Emotional Intelligence, Leading Change and so on.

We are not upset at all by this. HBP sees an opportunity to repackage their content (which they are brilliant at). They are merely providing a product that people might be interested given the publication of our book. They even did a service with including authors like Theodore Levitt, Rosabeth Moss Kanter and Michael Porter whose books didn’t work for us, but whose ideas in the HBR form are perfect for the business reader.

The 10 Must Read Articles is $29.95 and available from the HBP website.

Comments Off

March 30, 2009

Reading Outside the Normal Realm

Filed under: Lists — Todd Sattersten @ 2:46 pm
Tweet

Ken Peters wrote an article on Biznik titled “6 Not-So-Obvious Books Every Business Owner Should Read.”

I am a sucker for this stuff. I love it when people draw lessons from unexpected places.

Peters’ choices include:

  • The Lorax by Dr. Seuss
  • Lincoln at Gettysburg by Gary Wills
  • Design, Form & Chaos by Paul Rand (out of print, used copies)
  • Les Liaisons Dangereuses by Pierre by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos
  • The Art of Looking Sideways by Alan Fletcher
  • The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr., and E.B. White
Comments Off

A Guest Post from 100 Best Author Steve Farber

Filed under: 100 Best,Careers,Leadership,Personal Development,Thought Leaders — 800-CEO-READ @ 11:11 am
Tweet

Steve Farber, one of the best minds on leadership out there, and author of The Radical Leap (one of The 100 Best), has provided the article below. His new book is Greater Than Yourself: The Ultimate Lesson of True Leadership, and it’s out now. You’ll find the story below contains some of the key lessons from that book.
:::::
How Do You Get Back Up?
A Counterintuitive Approach to Thriving in Challenging Times

A while back, I received a distressed email from Ken, a young manager at a high-tech company.
Ken and I had never met, but he had read my first two books and had done his best to apply the ideas and practices of Extreme Leadership to the way he’d led his team. To their culture, their work ethic, their camaraderie. When necessary, Ken told me, they would band together and work hard—10 to 20 hours a day at times—to solve a problem or meet a pressing need. Ken’s wife would cook food for everyone and bring it to the office. They felt like a family, he said, committed to doing great work and devoted to one another’s success. No one ever complained, least of all Ken.
And then something happened. A downturn, a re-org, a shift in the management structure—we all know the drill. Ken still had a job, but his position was eliminated. New management full of old ideas came in to oversee the department’s function and the emotional fibers that connected Ken’s team to each other and to their work unraveled.
“Now,” Ken wrote, “for the last 4 weeks I sat at my cubicle, web surfing for 8 hours a day at the same company where I once worked 39 hours straight with my team to make things right, never going home.
“I’m not a quitter; I don’t want to leave. But—just or unjust—I feel stripped of everything we’ve done” he said. “So the advice I’m looking for is this:
“How do you get back up?”
I admit that I was loath to hand out that kind of potentially life-altering advice to someone I’d never met. After all, I had only the sketchiest of details about Ken’s situation, and it seemed way too presumptuous to represent myself as the all-knowing answer man. But I did have an idea for him, and I really felt that it could make a huge, positive difference in Ken’s life—and in the life of those he worked with.
And it wasn’t the kind of advice you’d expect.
It’s already become a cliché to say that we live in unprecedented, challenging times. We all know it. But the truth is, the world of work is always challenging. That’s why they call it “work.”
No matter the industry, market, or type of company you work in, you’ve had to deal with some combination of the classic work-place obstacles, issues, and barriers to a satisfying, fulfilling experience.
At some time or another, for example, you’ve reported to bosses or people in positions of authority who were self-centered at best, and idiotically egotistical at worst. They took all the credit and none of the blame and could care less whether or not you succeeded or failed. Or worse, they preferred that you’d fail, and took great pleasure in your struggles.
Or perhaps you worked in a company that, even though populated by terrific human beings, was so obsessed with the bottom line and shareholder value that they made executive, strategic decisions that compromised the employees’ ability to serve the customer. And the customers, therefore, exited in droves.
You may have been in an environment that was hyper-competitive to the point of paranoid, risk-averse to the point of stifling, or so political that it made you consider running for local office just to get some relief.
We’ve all experienced some combination of these themes with varying levels of intensity. And we’ve all spent some amount of time and energy navigating our way through the personal challenges that the organizational pitfalls present. It’s just the price we pay for hanging out with other human beings.
Now, add to that the current, sucking implosion in the economy, and it’s easy to see why, with all our efforts to be positive, productive leaders, we still get knocked down from time to time. Sometimes way down.
The problem is in the way we typically deal: Our knee-jerk reaction in times of crisis is to hold on tighter, to be more cautious in our actions, and more protective of our resources. We think that our way out—or up—will come by virtue of shoring up and hoarding what we have.
There is, however, a much better, far more powerful alternative. A counterintuitive course of action based on this ageless reality of true leadership:
Your own greatness as a leader (or in just about any other role you take on, for that matter) lies, paradoxically, in your ability to cause others to be greater than yourself.
Said another way, your (and my) best way out of a challenge or crisis is not to focus on your own peril or rut, but, instead, to reach out and try to boost someone else over your head.
The idea should sound familiar. It’s really just a variation on the “do unto others” sentiment of the Golden Rule, a philosophy that exists in virtually all religions, schools of thought, and philosophies on the planet. And in none of those versions—not one—will you find a footnote saying, “Does not apply Monday through Friday between the hours of 9 to 5 or any time you find yourself in a jam.”
So the solution I offered to Ken was this:
Pick someone at work to invest in, with the intent of making that person greater than you are. Be a coach, guide, or mentor in the truest, most personal sense of the words by choosing someone to be your GTY (Greater Than Yourself) project, and see what that does to your own predicament, your own state of mind.
Maybe it was out of desperation, but as surprised as he was by the curve ball I’d thrown him, Ken took my advice and agreed to the challenge.
Two weeks later, Ken wrote to say that he’d thought deeply about our conversation and had come to realize that before he could lift someone else up by sharing his knowledge and experience, he needed to be sure that he had learned the right lessons from the recent team trauma. So he’d met with his boss, and asked for feedback on how he could have acted differently, what he may have done to contribute to the problem, and how he could be a better leader in the future. The “30 minute meeting turned into a 2 hour confessional,” said Ken, which resulted in him learning some hard, “gold lessons” about himself.
“Now,” he continued, “I’ve already started to work with a tech on my team who wants to be a manager. And I’m taking a vow,” he said, “to make the people around me better—as I continue to grow myself. I’m going to teach my children about this, too.” Ken, it seems, has gotten his energy back, and he’s well on his way to getting back up.
We’re all human, just like Ken. And just like him, we all get bashed down from time to time. So, the next time that happens to you, resist the temptation to pull yourself up by the proverbial bootstraps, and reach out to pull someone else up, instead. Go find someone to be your GTY project.
Come to think of it, why wait?
About the Author
Steve Farber, author of Greater Than Yourself: The Ultimate Lesson of True Leadership, the president of Extreme Leadership, is a leadership consultant and speaker, and the author of the national bestseller The Radical Leap, and The Radical Edge. He lives in San Diego, California.
Copyright © 2009 Steve Farber

Comments Off

March 27, 2009

Imagining India & The Blue Sweater

Filed under: Uncategorized — dylan @ 1:34 pm
Tweet

Jacqueline Novogratz has one of the best stories behind the title of a book I’ve ever heard (but, I’ll let her tell it below). Novogratz is the founder and CEO of Acumen Fund and author of the recently released book, The Blue Sweater: Bridging the Gap Between Rich and Poor in an Interconnected World. It was our good friend, Seth Godin, who first suggested Jacqueline Novogratz to us, and like everything Seth recommends and supports, this book is pure gold. Seth wrote a blurb for the back of the book, stating:

Jacquline’s book and her work represent an entirely new way to look at things, a vivid opportunity for change, and most of all an obligation too spread the word about the way the world has evolved. We need to wake up and listen to what she has to say. Hurry!

Other notable fans of the book are Fareed Zakaria, who you may know from television or as the author of The Post-American World, and former US senator Bill Bradley. If you’ve enjoyed Muhammad Yunus’s books (Banker to the Poor and Creating a World Without Poverty), you’ll love this one.
On top of the story of The Blue Sweater that provided the title of this book, Jacqueline has many other inspiring, surprising and wonderful stories to tell. You can hear a few in her recent interview with Charlie Rose.



If you’re interested in learning more, you can read the prologue to her book at the book’s website, or buy the book from, well, us of course.
And, if you’re interested in other big-picture, world-altering-viewpoint books, I’d suggest Nandan Nilekani’s Imagining India. I just received my copy and haven’t been able to delve into it very deeply, but it looks fascinating, also comes recommended by Fareed Zakaria (It was his Book of the Week on last Sunday’s GPS) and the author has made it on Charlie Rose as well–and with Tom Friedman to boot, who got the idea for The World is Flat largely from Nilekani.

Comments Off

100 Best: Jack interviews Al Ries, co-author of Positioning

Filed under: Audio,The 100 Best — Jon8cr @ 11:03 am
Tweet

As technology develops, the ways for people to communicate have become incredibly easier, creating a flood of messaging and input that makes it difficult for companies to get their message received clearly. Positioning details how to effectively stake claim in the minds of consumers in honest ways, creating a new form of advertising where insight and familiarity rivals messaging.
This book is one of the books in Jack and Todd’s book The 100 Best Business Books of All Time.

Today’s interview is between Jack and Al Ries. Tune in.

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

Comments Off

Global Tweeting of The 100 Best

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 10:04 am
Tweet

This morning I picked up some chatter on the twitter search for “business books”:

100 best business books of all time binnen. shit ik ken maar 20%!!! help

Google translated the Bertrand Weegenar‘s concern for me from his native Dutch:

[100 best business books of all time inside. shit I know but 20%! help]

He also shared:

en wat ik (en misschien jij ook wel) echt mag gaan lezen Invloed van cialdini [and what I (and perhaps you also did) really should go read Influence of cialdini]

and

maar maar maar van de top 10 readers poll heb ik 90% score [but but but the top 10 readers poll, I have 90% score]

Love to see the book finding a global audience.

Comments Off

March 26, 2009

Read It For Me and You

Filed under: Big Ideas,Information Technology,Innovation — Todd Sattersten @ 9:09 am
Tweet

Steve Cunningham (@stevecunningham) has started a video business book review site called readitfor.me.

He is four reviews into the new site and this might be something you biz books geeks will want to check out.

Here was his review of Jeff Jarvis’ What Would Google Do?:

Comments Off

March 24, 2009

Why You Should Read Michael Lewis

Filed under: 100 Best,Big Ideas,Finance and Economics — Todd Sattersten @ 9:30 am
Tweet

There are a set of writers who we assign superpowers to in The 100 Best. To the Wall Street trader turned juggernaut writer Michael Lewis, we assigned interpretation. And that may not seem like much of a gift, but it is his ability to make apparent, to bring meaning and understanding to those hidden forces. Take his answer to the question asked by Fortune Magazine, “The stars of your books typically find ways to capitalize on market inefficiencies. Is contrariness necessary for greatness?” for example.

We chose Lewis’ book Moneyball for The 100 Best because the story of Billy Beane and his management of the Oakland Athletics transcends baseball. It is the story of a man disrupting an institution. These are lessons for design engineers, HR managers, and corporate strategists.

There are two other sports stories that Lewis has written that capture the same disruptive effect. The first was his 8,787 word story that appeared in Play, the now-defunct sport magazine of The New York Times, about Texas Tech football coach Mike Leach and his game-changing view for how college football should be played (consider the effect in their run at the national championship this year). The second appeared just a few weeks ago in The New York Times Magazine. The 9,004 word story centered on Houston Rockets Shane Battier and his almost unmatched ability to make his team better when he is on the court (and not through offense). Both are brilliant and should be read.

I’ll leave you with a few others if you find Lewis to your liking:

  • Commie Ball: A Journey to the End of a Revolution – How sports agent Gus Dominguez, who has been convicted (wrongly, Lewis believes) of smuggling Cuban baseball players to the United States.
  • The End – This is the current day afterword to Liar’s Poker.
  • An Interview with Michael Lewis – The Atlantic Monthly’s Business Channel interviewed the writer in January 2009 on the anthology he edited Panic, his crazy long, two-part New York Times op-ed he wrote with David Einhorn from the beginning of that month and the future of journalism (of which Lewis has little to worry about).
  • Wall Street on the Tundra – His latest from the April 2009 issue of Vanity Fair about the fall of Iceland’s economy.
Comments Off

March 23, 2009

Business Book Authors' Favorite Business Books

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 11:25 pm
Tweet

Inc. Magazine brought a video crew to the The 100 Best Launch party and asked some attendees about their favorite books:

Comments Off

Your Correspondent Reports Back from SXSWi

Filed under: Audio,Information Technology,Personal Development,Small Business — Todd Sattersten @ 7:57 pm
Tweet

I spent last week at the SXSW Interactive Festival in Austin, TX.

There was no time to slow down and write anything at length about the goings-on. Everything had to be done on the fly from the iPhone. So, I was twittering using the very cool browser-based Hahlo. You can go back and look at my SXSWi posts on Tweeter.

I also used my iPhone to record some interviews with authors attending the conference using VoiceNotes. You can check out the quality; it’s not bad.

And if you jump over to the Podcasts blog, you’ll find those short conversations with Ian Sanders, Pam Slim, and Charlene Li.

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