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December 23, 2009

Our Mile High Book Club: Best Airplane Reads from 8CR

Filed under: General Business,International Bestsellers — Tags: General Business, International Best Sellers, Travel — Roy @ 11:59 am
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I was inspired by NPR’s Mile HIgh Book Club listing today and thought to myself, “Hey! Lots of people will be grabbing a plane to visit family and friends this weekend – what would business minded people want to read during their travels?” Well, why not pick from the Top 10 business books that we’ve sold overseas and across borders in 2009?

Here’s what you get to pick from – choose wisely:

# 1 Put More Cash in Your Pocket – Italy

# 2 Instant Wealth Wake Up Rich! – United Kingdom

# 3 Get Off Your Duff and Make Your Own @#$! Cheese – Australia

# 4 Women Want More – Germany

# 5 The Next Evolution of Marketing – Greece

# 6 Made to Stick – Latvia

# 7 Seven Lessons for Leading in Crisis - Canada

# 8 Your Brain at Work – Czech Republic

# 9 Outrageous Advertising that’s Outrageously Successful – Israel

# 10 Innovation Nation – Japan

coverartBut hey there now! You say that you don’t have a long flight or you’re going to be stuck hitching a ride with Uncle Hank and Aunt Fern? Why not take along the COOLEST business book around with you on that journey: The 100 Best Business Books of All Time!!!

Not only will you be well read on all the great books in it – you’ll have an escape from the re-telling of Cousin Frank’s battle with the bulge during the season! (Oh, and with the book tucked under your arm as you dash to the ticket line… You’ll even look smarter to boot!)

Happy Reading and Happier Holidays!

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December 22, 2009

In the Books – Off to the Printers

Filed under: Uncategorized — dylan @ 12:53 pm
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We’ve been working very hard on producing In the Books, our annual review of business books, for many months now. Like the year itself, it wasn’t an easy project, but it is always a labor of love and one we’re extremely proud of. We’ve mentioned many times over the year that the downturn in the economy has hit us as it did everyone else out there, and along with focusing on the many books that address—and offer solutions to—the challenges we all face, it is something we go into a bit more personally in this year’s annual.

Because of the down economy and the layoffs it forced in our company, we’ve had a lean staff of folks to put the annual together this year, but it’s done. We’ve just sent the files to the printer! To celebrate this, I will be posting some of the articles from previous issues of In the Books for the remainder of the year, starting with one I myself wrote for last year’s issue.

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Financial Markets: Their Promise and Failure (and Promise) BY DYLAN SCHLEICHER

The year 2008 will go down in economic history. The current credit crisis is the most fundamental challenge we have experienced in our economy since The Great Depression.

The books published this year reflect turns of profound optimism, harsh reality, and a dire skepticism of what the future holds.

Jeffrey D. Sachs’ Common Wealth and Muhammed Yunus’s Creating a World Without Poverty, both published in the early months of 2008, envision a world where poverty is not only alleviated, but eradicated through the forces of market capitalism. Gary Hirshberg’s Stirring It Up envisions a world where market forces serve as stewards of an environmental revolution, and in The Necessary Revolution, Peter Senge illustrates how these forces, in alliance with various government and non-profit entities, are bringing an end to the divisions of the industrial age and quietly addressing the challenges of a growing climate crisis.

But the crisis of the year has so far been in the very markets these authors see solving those humanitarian concerns. To have any hope of these visions panning out, the world economy will have to right itself. And so we turn our eyes to Wall Street.

In his superlative history of “the Street,” Wall Street, Steve Fraser describes the development of our current economic system, set up in the latter part of the 19th century and resulting in what is commonly referred to as “The Gilded Age:”

…Wall Street housed the engine room which transformed the structure of industry, providing the capital resources and organizational inventiveness that gave birth to the modern, publicly traded corporation and thereby to the modern economy. United States Steel, General Electric, and International Harvester were but a few of the household names of American business midwifed and often controlled by the Street’s great investment banks. It was on the Street that the nation’s great undertakings—its coast-to-coast railroads and stupendous agricultural output; its gigantic steel, oil, and raw materials industries; its pioneering technologies in electricity and chemicals—were alchemized. … Here New York’s investment bankers and brokers turned the tangible wherewithal of the country into its paper facsimile, a virtual economy whose very liquidity made possible the mobilizing of ever greater capital funds to further enlarge the scope, efficiency, and power of the whole U.S. economy. (Wall Street, 30-31)

And, these innovations have continued to power the whole economy for over a century. Remember, though, that the Gilded Age ended in the Depression, and there have been many bumps in the road. Many commentators, including Nobel Laureate in Economics Paul Krugman, have dubbed the most recent excesses on Wall Street the “New Gilded Age.” Is the current crisis just another bump in the road? Certainly the “very liquidity,” or lack thereof, “that made possible the mobilizing of ever greater capital funds” seems to have dried up, at least temporarily.

Thankfully, a number of big names have weighed in to help us understand the topic. David M. Snick (The World is Curved), George Soros (The New Paradigm for Financial Markets), and Charles Morris (The Trillion Dollar Meltdown) all tackle the issues competently, looking at the historical factors and bafflingly complex financial instruments that led us into this turmoil.

All three of these authors extend their histories of the current economic climate back to the end of World War II, and trace the rise of market globalization to the early 1980s and the policies of the Reagan Administration, which took The Chicago School of Economics belief in free markets as gospel and began the deregulation of financial markets. Snick sees it as the beginning of “a golden age of wealth creation and poverty reduction never before seen in the history of mankind,” (The World is Curved, 15) but qualifies that statement by saying, “That is the good news.” Well, that is some pretty wonderful news, and though it may sound like hyperbole, the statistics bear it out. While globalization has had its great benefits, beginning the process of systematic deregulation that allowed it is also the point at which what Soros calls the “super-bubble,” and Morris simply calls a “credit bubble,” began to inflate. Snick gives you the bad news himself:

The bad news is that today’s spectacular global economy is both unstable and unsettling. As jobs and investment move around the world, people lose incomes and pensions. And as these enormous shifts occur, the economic benefits of the system are often unfairly distributed. (The World is Curved, 16)

We have now seen that instability play out. Soros was prescient in The New Paradigm, projecting that “Eventually, the U.S. government will have to use taxpayer money to arrest the decline in house prices. Until it does, the decline will be self-reinforcing, with people walking away from homes in which they have negative equity and more and more financial institutions becoming insolvent…” On the 3rd of October, the United States Congress passed a bill that injected 700 billion dollars of taxpayer money into the credit markets, buying up the “toxic waste” mortgages on Wall Street’s balance sheets in the hope that once free of them, financial institutions would begin lending money again and provide the much needed liquidity to the economy and rescue Main Street from the crisis. (As I write this, mid-October, 2008, we have yet to see if this has worked.)

Liquidity today is largely a game of confidence. Snick argues that liquidity is simply another name for confidence. In his book, he discusses with Alan Greenspan how “the job of central banking, because of the need to bolster confidence, has become an elaborate form of ‘theatre,’ with the financial markets acting as audience.” (The World is Curved, 23)

Neither Soros nor Morris spent any time in conversation with Mr. Greenspan, but he does make an appearance in their books. Morris describes “The Greenspan Put,” which, according to the author, is a market where “No matter what goes wrong, the Fed will rescue you by creating enough cheap money to buy you out of your troubles.” (The Trillion Dollar Meltdown, 65) As he writes further in The Trillion Dollar Meltdown:

In the aftermath of the tragic events of September 11, 2001, the Fed continued to lower rates—all the way down to 1 percent by 2003, the lowest rate in a half-century . The Fed did not start raising rates again until mid-2004, and for thirty-one consecutive months, the base inflation-adjusted short-term interest rate was negative. For bankers, in other words, money was free. (The Trillion Dollar Meltdown, 59)

How things have changed. But why have a few (okay, a lot) of default mortgages caused such fear that banks are increasingly unlikely to lend to each other and other businesses—providing the liquidity that has fueled our economy for so long—while only a few months ago they were still scrambling to do so? David Snick compares the global credit market to a benevolent great-uncle:

During the Great Credit Crisis of 2007-2008, the benevolent great-uncle panicked, not because of the subprime mortgage default, or a U.S. housing bubble that was spreading beyond its shores. The panic unfolded precisely because suddenly nobody could say which financial institutions held the subprime toxic waste, and at what price. The situation was exacerbated by the sudden complexity of the financial system as a result of securitization, which resulted in a lack of transparency. (The World is Curved, 14)

Charles Morris describes that complexity in further detail:

Residential mortgages became grist for quantitative portfolio management after they had been re-engineered into instruments that looked much like tradable bonds. The investment efficiencies generated large benefits for both investment banks and consumers but were quickly carried to dangerous extremes. Since then, however, there has been an all-out push to reconfigure almost all assets—office building mortgages, emerging market bonds, risky bank loans, and much else—so that they behave more like idealized securities rather than the lumpy, gnarly instruments they really are. The re-engineering greatly improved market efficiencies and reduced funding costs but also created the illusion that the underlying risks were well understood and under control. (The Trillion Dollar Meltdown, 57-58)

After more than a century of economic growth that has built America from a relatively small nation at war with itself into the world’s premier superpower, the system that put us there is on the brink of chaos. Economic innovation turned into financial creativity, which like many arts, has become a little too creative for anyone to truly understand (which is OK if you’re looking at a canvas, but disastrous if you’re looking at a spreadsheet).

We’ll soon see, possibly by the time this is published, whether the steps taken to avert disaster have been successful. What’s certain is that the entire game seems to have changed, or more accurately, to be changing. The game is still being played with American dollars, but it has been globalized, and not everyone is playing with the same set of rules or institutions.

Peter Senge sums up how he sees the whole of the current economy in The Necessary Revolution:

In effect, there now exists a vast casino sitting atop the real economy, and the casino players, increasingly, are dictating the course of those involved in real business. “How is it” [Charles] Handy mused, “that those who provide the money carry more clout than those who actually create the wealth?” (The Necessary Revolution, 351)

That casino is no longer paying out, and the new president and next Congress will have to hammer out an entirely new financial structure and regulation system. It will be interesting to see what it looks like. While the publicly traded corporation has been the driver of economic growth for over a century, some see even that as corrupted and in need of change. In a chapter entitled “The Future of the Corporation,” Peter Senge and his team question:

How is it that investors, who once needed protection, now dominate to the extent that thirty-year-old analysts can cause fifty-year-old CEOs to quake at their displeasure? How is it that societies that trumpet democratic values seem to be blind to the fact that their most powerful institutions operate much as totalitarian states? How did we lose sight of the historical perspective that the privatization of wealth was a privilege granted by corporate charter rather than a right gained merely by personal ambition? (The Necessary Revolution, 349)

They come to the conclusion that:

Corporations are artifacts of history. Their design stems from mental models, not the laws of physics. When the time is right, they can and will change, probably far more rapidly than almost anyone expects. (The Necessary Revolution, 354)

We don’t know what they will end up looking like, but there are already changes being made in the structures of global finance. Sovereign Wealth funds are funding much of America’s current debt, while the financiers of the past—Wall Street’s great investment banks—are great no longer, having either been swallowed by rivals (Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers) or, under the instruction of the US Government, become bank holding companies (Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley).

Yet, looking beyond the current crisis, innovation and hope are still being driven by markets and capitalism. By providing a very small amount of liquidity—micro-loans to those unable to attain credit in the traditional market around the world—Muhammed Yunus and micro lenders like him have created a new entrepreneurial class that proves that the fundamentals of market capitalism work. In Creating a World Without Poverty, Yunus writes that “Globalization, as a general business principle, can bring more benefits to the poor than any alternative,” but tempers that enthusiasm with statements like, “Unfettered markets in their current form are not meant to solve social problems and instead may actually exacerbate poverty, disease, pollution, corruption, crime, and inequality.” (Creating a World Without Poverty, 5) This is what he believes social business can address. He sums up his feelings, writing, “I am in favor of strengthening the freedom of the market. At the same time, I am very unhappy about the conceptual restrictions imposed on the players in the market.” (Creating a World Without Poverty, 242)

In order to fulfill the promise of addressing the problems humanity faces as Yunus, Sachs, Senge and others suggest they can, markets must actually work. But it is no longer true that we can simply let the market work. We must create markets that work for us. We must replace the invisible hand with a guiding one. Here’s to hoping that the United States Government and the American Taxpayer, acting as the world’s largest hedge fund, are up to the job. The books published this year won’t be the final word on this crisis, but I do hope they are read widely, especially by those sculpting the solution to the crisis and rebuilding our markets.

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New Space Update #4

Filed under: General Business — Tags: Blogging, General Business — Roy @ 11:46 am
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Here it ’tis – almost the holiday season – and we’re knee deep in renovations still! It’s coming along nicely but it cannot happen too soon enough for us. The new office space should be done after the first of the year – so, until that time comes – we want you to see what’s happened up until now:

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Huge Discounts

Filed under: Blog — Jon @ 9:50 am
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Around this time of year, companies commonly slash prices to ease the cost of gift giving.  While all of our books can be ordered in bulk at great discounts any time of year, there are certain books we offer at huge discounts at any quantity.  But, we wondered, did anyone know these offers existed on our site? So, we’ve collected all these books into one section, called, Huge Discounts, and have created a link to it at the top of every page of our site.

Make sure to check there often, as the books featured will change regularly.  Limited quantities may be available of each title, and once the book is off the page, the deal is over and the book will go back to the standard bulk discount schedule.  There are some great titles up there now, featuring Crush It, Strengthsfinder 2.0, The Go Giver, Trust Agents, and many more.  Thanks for having a look.

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December 21, 2009

A Man in Woman’s Clothes?

Filed under: General Business,Uncategorized — Tags: General Business — Roy @ 3:41 pm
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I just spotted an article posted by aol jobs this morning about a woman in Quebec that posed as a man on her blog and received benefits on both professional and monetary levels. It’s astounding to think such sexism still is in place at the end of 2009 – read on:

    What’s in a Name? Big Profits, Apparently – by Lisa Johnson Mandell

    Oh no he didn’t! Oh yes she did– and it worked! You wouldn’t think professional gender bias in this century would be much of an issue, but according to an extremely successful female blogger/copywriter who goes by the name of James Chartrand, taking on a male pen name meant the difference between applying for welfare and buying a house.

    The single mother of two from a small town in Quebec, Canada, was at wit’s end scrambling for writing jobs that would enable her to care for her young daughters. So she decided to take advantage of a perceived bias. “In my own perception of the business world today, I think of men in suits at the top. I think of male CEOs,” she explains.

    Becoming One of the Boys
    Her first step was to create a writing persona that smacked of boys club success–someone those men in suits could easily relate to. She pulled the name ‘James Chartrand’ out of thin air, and began experimenting by pitching the same job under the same terms, with his name and with her own given name. The results were immediate and surprising. The male pitch won the assignment every time–every time!

    “They didn’t question me as James,” she says. “What struck me most was the instant respect I received. No one asked me about working at home and dealing with kids. They just assumed I worked in a professional office and had the brains, the talent, the ideas and the skills. I expected more money, and I got it.”

    After testing the waters by submitting proposals under both male and female names, she eventually decided to stick with the masculine moniker, and began blogging under it. When Michael Stelzner listed her on his Top Ten Blogs for Writers, things really took off. Men with Pens was launched, a site that offers “On target web design and copywriting to help you hit the bulls-eye of success.” It has been such a hit that she has taken on a partner and brought in the services of other writers as well.

    Coming Out of the Closet
    She kept her little secret under wraps for about three years, until an angry former friend threatened to ‘out’ her online. She decided to do the honors herself, and wrote an extensive blog on her popular blog site, copyblogger.com, wittily slugged “Why James Chartrand Wears Women’s Underpants.” The results of her outing were also surprising.

    “I’d say it’s been about 95% positive, 5% negative,” she notes. “Anyone who’s ever been discriminated against on a job application because of their name, whether it’s Indian, Asian or anything else, certainly understands.” But has it affected her work?

    “My clients say it changes nothing — they just want to know if they’ll have their copy by Friday.” She has decided to continue writing under her masculine pseudonym, more for privacy’s sake than for any other reason. She lives in a small town, and is very protective of her children. “Using a man’s name seemed to make some people uncomfortable, and they seem to think I’m repressing who I really am” she adds. “But writing as James, I feel liberated, not repressed James is part of who I am.” She says she enjoys being free of female stereotypes–and lower female pay.

    Prose by Any Other Name
    “I’m looking at twitter right now, and people are asking me if I’m going to change my writing style,” she laughs, incredulous that people would even wonder such a thing. Besides, going into proverbial closet then coming out may have been one of her most unwittingly strategic moves yet. Since confessing in her blog, she has been besieged by the media: in less than an hour she received a call from Newsweek, a literary agent, and an AOL blogger (that would be me). Do a web search for James Chartrand, and you’ll see her story everywhere.

    Still, she says she wouldn’t advise others to try it. “You face a lot of pressure from other people who question who you are,” she says, referring to the fact that the tension inherent in keeping a secret about your identity can be daunting. Although she’s received incredible opportunities for having admitted to her transgendered professional personality, she says most people respond with, “Yes, you’re a woman, now can we all move on and get back to work?”

    For further reading on women and business…. try these titles:

    Live It, Love It, Earn It: A Woman’s Guide to Financial Freedom by Mariana Olszewski
    Women in the Workplace: Wages, Respect, and Equal Rights by Jeri Freedman
    Backwards in High Heels: A Woman’s Guide to Succeeding in Business by Sheila Stewart
    Tales from the Glass Ceiling: A Survival Guide for Women in Business by Jo Haigh
    The Power of Respect: Benefit from the Most Forgotten Element of Success by Deborah Norville

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December 18, 2009

Friday Links

Filed under: Friday Links,Uncategorized — dylan @ 5:20 pm
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We’re back with the Friday Links. We missed last week’s due to our holiday party (which we’d like to thank the folks at Carnivale for helping us make such a success) so we have two weeks worth of links for you.

➻ First up, we have the Arts Beat covering the announcement from many publishers that they will delay eBook publications in an effort to stop them from cannibalizing hardcover sales, much in the same way they do with paperbacks. Seth Godin doesn’t agree with the move, stating publishers would be better advised to take advantage of the digital product’s Magic of Dynamic Pricing, and Todd Sattersten called it The First Mistake of publishers in the digital world. On a related note, The New York Times takes a look at the Legal Battles Over E-Book Rights to Older Books.

➻ Aforementioned friend of the company Todd compiled some great material on the The Future of Magazines (and Books and Newspapers) on his blog today. He then sent us a link in which bigthink.com asks “Will you mourn the death of print newspapers?” and Ricky Gervais responds:

➻ The Harvard Business Review has chosen The 100 Best-Performing CEOs in the World.

➻ I don’t know exactly what recommendation my older brother Aaron was suggesting when he forwarded this list from McSweeney’s (it’s continuously updated), but I’m going to go with this one:

A beer at lunch, just every once in a while
Have a lager, no an ale, no no: a lager. Every once in a while. It adds character to your meal and definition to your day. Try it at a sun-lit table away from the bar and looking out to the corner intersection. Take a gentle sip when you see that woman with the stroller cross the street. Set it down and grab another forkful of salad, another bite of pickle-topped burger, another ketchup-dipped fry.

➻ Galleycat has a great interview with Gary Vaynerchuk on How to Engage with Your Readers.

➻ The Christian Science Monitor has picked it’s best books of the year: Fiction | Nonfiction | Children’s | Cookbooks

➻ in good news to those who love all things analogue, Vinyl Records and Turntables Are Gaining Sales.

➻ In more sorrowful news, guitar great Jack Rose has died at age 38.

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December 17, 2009

TIME’s Person of the Year – In Fed We Trust

Filed under: Big Ideas,Global Business,History and Biographies,Leadership,Uncategorized — dylan @ 5:10 pm
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Time magazine has picked its person of the year, beginning their description of him thus:

A bald man with a gray beard and tired eyes is sitting in his oversize Washington office, talking about the economy.

Hooked yet? Try this:

He’s shy … he prefers to eat at home with his wife, who still makes him do the dishes and take out the trash. Then they do crosswords or read. Because Ben Bernanke is a nerd.

Ben Bernanke was eerily suited to be the Fed Chief during a time of crisis. His life before public service was that of a scholar, and his scholarship was in the Great Depression. That serendipity might just be what has saved us—if indeed we are saved—from another full-blown depression.

Bernanke has caught a lot of political flack for his decisions—from both sides of the aisle. It wasn’t a particularly populist move to pump hundreds of billions of dollars into a financial system that had just failed the country on so many levels. However, as Time‘s Managing Editor Rick Stengel stated last night on Charlie Rose, “The financial system and the economy are two different things, but if the financial system goes down, it takes the economy with it.” Being a scholar of the Great Depression, Bernanke knew this and did what he thought necessary to prop up the financial system to stave off the worst-case scenario for the entirety of the American (and therefor world) economy.

There seems to be a growing number of folks distrustful of government intervention in the markets, in any scenario, that are worried about Bernanke’s moves. Ron Paul’s call to literally End the Fed is a bestseller, for example. But even Milton Friedman, the “OG” of distrust in government intervention, thought it necessary for the state to pump money into the economy in times of crisis. As David Wessel asserts in his great book In Fed We Trust: Ben Bernanke’s War on the Great Panic, published by Crown Business in August:

“Today, the notion that the government should or would stand by as the stock market crashed, credit markets stalled, and the economy tumbled over the abyss seems implausibly bizarre. The public, politicians, professors, and the press have been shaped by searing memories or photographs from the Great Depression, the years in which the unemployment rate rose to 25 percent and the county’s output of goods and services declined by 29 percent over four years. The lasting lesson—taught by economists with views as different as John Maynard Keynes and Milton Friedman, the leading economic minds of the twentieth century—is embraced almost universally by politicians and economic policy makers: government can and should act to prevent such a dangerous downward financial and economic spiral” (page 46).

Bernanke went so far as to use Friedman’s ideas to rationalize his intervention:

“The government might, he suggested, cut taxes, increase the federal deficit, and issue bonds that the Fed would buy by printing money. This, he said, was ‘essentially equivalent to Milton Friedman’s famous “helicopter drop” of money.’ (Friedman used the line in 1969 to argue that depression and deflation were avoidable. If nothing else worked, the Fed could send a helicopter to drop dollar bills to get people spending.)” (In Fed We Trust page 78).

This sounds like it could have come straight out of the Keynesian playbook, but Bernanke is no reincarnation of the great John Maynard Keynes,* who, in the words of author Robert Skidelsky, “gave governments two
tasks: to pump up the economy with air when it starts to deflate, and to minimize the chances of serious shocks
happening in the first place.” (Keynes page xiv). Rather, Bernanke has acted an apolitical steward that has worked for two separate, almost ideologically opposite presidents, that has managed to avert an almost certain disaster. I think he’s a fine choice for person of the year, and as Michael Grunwald wrote for TIME:

“He’s earned the benefit of the doubt. It’s now up to our dysfunctional political system to let him do his job—and to fix the financial system so that he never has to save the world again.”

*There were a number of great books published on Keynes and his economic philosophy this year, including:

  • Keynes: The Return of the Master
  • Keynes: The Rise, Fall, and Return of the 20th Century’s Most Influential Economist
  • Where Keynes Went Wrong: And Why World Governments Keep Creating Inflation, Bubbles, and Busts
  • The Keynes Solution: The Path to Global Economic Prosperity

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Free Rich Dad Workshop: Milwaukee

Filed under: Uncategorized — Roy @ 5:04 pm
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coverartIf you’re in the Milwaukee area for the holiday season, or if you just REALLY like the Rich Dad books, or if you’re cheap (like me) – check out the FREE workshop that Robert Kiyosaki is throwing in our neck of the woods!!

The seminar will touch on topics from the Rich Dad Prophecy, help you get financial freedom, includes advanced training, special offers and you get a FREE USB flash drive.

Sunday, Dec. 20th through Tuesday, December 22nd – for more information on the event go to www.richdadstocksuccess.com

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December 16, 2009

What is it about Baseball?

Filed under: Jack's Thoughts — Jack @ 3:31 pm
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I’ve been reading a lot about baseball lately. In The Man with Two Arms by Billy Lombardo (coming in February 2010), a new father is thinking about his soon-to-be-born son.

What about baseball? Now there was a gift he could give. Baseball was about grace and beauty and character, it was about strength and achievement. It was about competition. It was about fathers and sons, and for the luckiest of mortals it was a way to play into adulthood. It was the best use of grass and dirt every dreamed in the heads of men.

In May, as a tribute to Ted Williams’ last at-bat, a new edition of John Updike’s New Yorker article, “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu” will be released as a special publication by The Library of America. It’s the best piece of writing about baseball I’ve ever read, and reread. Updike writes:

Williams is the classic ballplayer of the game on a hot August weekday, before a small crowd, when the only thing at stake is the tissue-thin difference between a thing done well and a thing done ill. Baseball is a game of the long season, of relentless and gradual averaging-out.

What is it about baseball and why are there so many beautifully written books about it, so many profound thoughts that spring from the game? Roger Angell and W.P. Kinsella’s many books, Michael Lewis’s Moneyball and Bernard Malamud’s The Natural among so many others are truly timeless and often better reads a second time. That doesn’t seem the case for football, basketball or other sports, just baseball.

As a resident of the upper northern hemisphere, I’m still physically and mentally preparing for that awful sunlight-deprived, cold, snowy time called winter, so when the local news show starts talking about pitchers and catchers reporting for spring training, I’m transported forward in time, and eagerly cracking open one of these great baseball books while waiting for the first crack of the bat.

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The Billion Dollar Mistake

Filed under: Blog — shawn @ 1:39 pm
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billion

How much can a person learn through other people’s mistakes? Plenty, especially when those people are successful billionaire investors. Author and a successful investor himself Stephen L. Weiss in his book The Billion Dollar Mistake reviews 11 cases where highly knowledgeable and wealthy investors (read: billionaires) make major gaffes costing them and fellow investors huge amounts of money. How could this happen? How could they each ignore basic investing protocol creating these monumental blunders after a career of success? Well, we ultimately learn even billionaires are human too. 

Weiss creates a fascinating look at these cases with up close narrative reporting. In some instances the famous investors themselves review their mistakes and provide a surprising candor on how and why they failed. You almost feel like an eavesdropper in a closed door meeting learning untold secrets. Who knew investing could be so riveting! 

Towards the end of each chapter the author provides excellent timelines summarizing the chain of events (which I found myself skipping to first – then back to the start). At the end of each case he lists clear explanations of what went wrong and concise look at what we can learn from that. These are the investing mistakes that everyday investors can become aware of and avoid making. We realize of course that our investments will be about 10 zeros less than theirs, but the lessons learned can still apply just as well.

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