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September 16, 2009

National Boss's Day: October 16

Filed under: 100 Best,Blog — Jon @ 9:03 am
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Whether you love or hate your boss, October 16 is the day you can make your relationship with them a little better. And we at 8cr think you’ll be hard pressed to find a better way to do that than to give them a copy of The 100 Best Business Books of All Time.

If things are cool between you and your boss, they’ll appreciate the knowledge you’ll share with them via the book. It’ll be a great conversation piece for the both of you, and might inspire discussions that lead you both to greater success. The flip side of the coin is that your boss will also learn a great deal of things by reading the book, which might take care of some of those things you don’t like about them. Either way, it’s a win-win scenario. Celebrate!

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August 28, 2009

Butterfly in the Sky…

Filed under: 100 Best,Personal Development — dylan @ 10:01 am
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When Geordi La Forge left his career as helmsman and chief engineer of the starship Enterprise , he found a new calling—as a champion of literacy to Earth’s children. Known to us as LeVar Burton, he took the helm of Reading Rainbow in 1983. (I know the television sequence of events runs backwards here, The Next Generation not premiering until 1987 and all, but the man was a chief engineer… I’m sure he found some ripple in the fabric of space-time to exploit. But you don’t have to take my word for it. Okay, yeah, you do.)

But, after 26 years on the air, nobody is putting up the cash to renew Reading Rainbow‘s broadcasting rights (NPR story here), leaving a void in the world of peer-reviewed children’s literature. Having been on the air since before I was literate, I’ve taken it for granted that Reading Rainbow would always be around. Along with Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood and Sesame Street—which, by the way, are the only two children’s series that ran for longer on PBS—Reading Rainbow was an integral part of my generation’s upbringing—being raised on television as we were. We would watch it at home and in school, and it was not an uncommon occurrence for everyone in a room to spontaneously break out in the theme-song, which everyone knew. Butterfly in the sky… Not since 3-2-1 Contact had a song took such a hold of our developing minds.

So, in remembrance of a fine show with a noble purpose, let’s join together in song one last time. I can go anywhere! And, Oh, the Places You’ll Go! (More on that below.)

We try to do our small part to support children’s books here as well. Jack and Todd chose Dr. Seuss’s Oh, the Places You’ll Go! as one of The 100 best Business Books of All Time, and we recommended others in a sidebar of the book called Business Books for Kids of All Ages. I’ve excerpted that below.

Business Books for Kids of All Ages BY REBECCA SCHLEI HARTMAN

Sometimes to think outside the box you have to draw outside the lines. Draw inspiration, that is, from unlikely sources. “All grown-ups were children first,” wrote Antoine De Saint-Exupéry. Whether it’s time to reevaluate, rejuvenate, or simply escape the demands of our busy lives, we recommend returning to the stories and lessons that were most impressive to us as children. The truths you’ll find there are timeless. Here are a few stories in which we find inspiration again and again.

Le petit prince, or The Little Prince, is Antoine De Saint-Exupéry’s classic novella about a small, extraterrestrial boy who changes a grown man’s life by reminding him of simple truths too often forgotten with age: Children learn by asking questions. Flowers bloom when they are nurtured. Work is futile when it lacks purpose. You must experience the world to appreciate it. There is still time to make friends. And, perhaps most profoundly, On ne voit bien qu’avec le coeur, l’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux—”One sees clearly only with the heart. Anything essential is invisible to the eyes” (63). The Little Prince will put you in a renewed frame of mind; you might even look up at the stars tonight.

Based on a short story by Leo Tolstoy, Jon J. Muth’s The Three Questions follows a small boy, Nikolai, as he searches for answers to three questions: “When is the best time to do things?” “Who is the most important one?” and “What is the right thing to do?” As Nikolai visits his animal friends and helps a few in need, he learns—with a little help from an old turtle named Leo—that he already possesses the answers. Jon J. Muth’s concise prose and serene watercolors make The Three Questions a contemplative read for children and adults alike.

Kevin Carroll’s Rules of the Red Rubber Ball is a creative little book with a big message for people of all ages: no matter what you do, pursue that which makes you most happy…and pursue it with abandon. For the young Carroll growing up on the streets of Philadelphia, the playground was his refuge and passion. Rules of the Red Rubber Ball is both his remarkable story of chasing that red rubber ball for the rest of his life, and also a powerful charge to dream big, take chances, and make time for play in everything you do.

In Walk On! A Guide for Babies of All Ages, Marla Frazee uses Baby’s experience of learning to walk as a metaphor for knowing how to get out of a rut, take chances, overcome obstacles, and determine who and what to trust. It’s the earliest “try, try again” experience we have as humans. “See how different everything looks from here?” Walk On! reminds us that sometimes you have to stand on your own two feet to find a new perspective on the world.

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August 6, 2009

My Favorite Business Book by You

Filed under: 100 Best,Lists,The Company — Todd Sattersten @ 1:16 pm
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Earlier this year, we released The 100 Best Business Books of All Time.

In making such a bold statement, we received both congratulatory notes and outright condemnation of our selections. As you can imagine, hard decisions had to be made. There was simply no way around the fact that there were going to be deserving books and authors left out.

We launched My Favorite Business Book in March of 2009 to remedy that numerical constraint and open the selection process to more people than just two booksellers from Milwaukee. The site allows anyone to share the story of their favorite book and make the case for why others should read it.

This document is just a sampling of the stories that readers have shared with us. With enough participation, we believe we can build a resource that will provide a book recommendation for most any problem, a peer-generated bibliography of the best and most useful business resources bound in covers.

The process only takes a few minutes to complete. If you’d like to participate, or simply read more stories, head on over to myfavoritebizbook.com.

My Favorite Business Book

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July 27, 2009

100 Best Bonus Industry Chapter on Scribd.com

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 5:45 pm
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Today, I posted the Industry Books Bonus Chapter on Scribd.com. This is long overdue, but combination of Chris Anderson’s Free promotions and a BEA podcast I listened to on the way into work convinced me it was time to stop dragging me feet. So, enjoy it here, on scribd.com or you can still download the pdf from us.

Who doesn’t love embedding?

The 100 Best Business Books of All Time – Bonus Chapter on Industry Books

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July 24, 2009

Monday Dots Describes Christensen's Disruptive Innovation

Filed under: 100 Best,General Management,Innovation,Strategy — Todd Sattersten @ 9:41 am
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Jeff Monday at Monday Dots has focused his latest video on the process of disruptive innovation. Jeff’s source material is Harvard Business School Professor Clay Christensen’s The Innovator’s Dilemma (a 100 Best selection) and The Innovator’s Solution.

Using his unique dots approach, the video below quickly summarizes Christensen’s theories:

At the end of the video, Jeff goes even further and suggests an improvement:

While I think this is good solution, I see it as highly reactive. I think an organization should do as Toyota did and implement a clear and hold strategy similar to what the Marines do in their counterinsurgency operations. When competition, demanding customers, and profit mazimazation drive a company to innovate up market, a company should establish an autonomous business unit to move up market much like Toyota did with the creation of Lexus. And even though they were proactive in creating Lexus, sometimes a disruption redifines the market by turning non consumers into customers, forcing an incumbent to be reactive. Ultimately Toyota had to establish Scion to compete with disruptors like Hyundai and Kia.

All of the Monday Dots videos are interesting and worth a look, and in this case, a extremely compelling way to present the original disruptive innovation concepts using a visual, viral medium.

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July 23, 2009

Bob's Slice of The 100 Best

Filed under: 100 Best,General Management,Marketing,Personal Development,Retail,Sales — Todd Sattersten @ 12:11 pm
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Bob Adams at 27 gen has written a series of posts on books he liked from The 100 Best Business Books of All Time and how they apply to church leadership. His first post is about our book and Drucker’s Effective Executive.

His other books include:

  • Purple Cow – blog post / book link
  • Six Thinking Hats – blog post / book link
  • Leading Change – blog post / book link
  • Why We Buy – blog post (with additional here , here, and here) / book link
  • Little Red Book of Selling – blog post / book link

He ends his last post by saying:

That’s my quick look at “The 100 Best Business Books of All Time.” Check it out of your local library, or pick up a copy for your own library. There’s a wealth of wisdom inside from the business world that you can make applications in your world today.

Thanks Bob!

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July 2, 2009

100 Best at WriteMind Institute

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 3:48 pm
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One of the stops on our tour for The 100 Best Business Books of All Time was Asheville, North Carolina. Jonathan Flaum was kind enough to host an event at his WriteMind Institute that combined his views of the world with the meta-themes we found throughout The 100 Best.

Jonathan in this video clip talks about wisdom in decision-making using the story of Moses. I promise you’ll enjoy it.

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June 16, 2009

How To Read a (Business) Book – beta release

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 8:11 am
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I have been feverishly working on an essay on how to best read a business book. An ebook version of the piece is being given out to those attending the workshop I am doing with Kevin Eikenberry next week.

I want to pull out one section and get your thoughts.

Leave Your Mark

Recording what it is you learned from reading a book should happen both inside and outside that book.

First of all, get over any fear you have of writing in a book. Business books are meant to be interacted with. Take a pen and leave notes in the margins. Get out that pink highlighter you used in college and mark up passages that strike you. The guys at Brand Autopsy used to keep a Dog-Ear Score for the number of pages folded over by the time they reached the end. Tim Sanders, in his book Love Is the Killer App, suggested that important learning points be written on the first blank page in the front of the book and great quotes for future presentations be recorded on the inside back cover. Personally I became a fan of 3-M Post-It Flags in writing The 100 Best for quickly marking pages that I needed to return to later.

Now you need to share what you have learned with the world. It doesn’t matter how. Pick a form and a medium and go with it. Steve Cunningham at readitfor.me decided videos were the best way to share his passion for business books. Chris Yeh builds book outlines on a wiki. Sean wrote short reviews and provided mind maps drawn on brown paper bags. John Moore uses SlideShare and creates quick presentations with the “money quotes.”

Leaving marks in the book and leaving your own mark about what you learned will help you solve your problem and, in tandem, help others solve theirs.

How do you leave a mark when you read a book? What techniques do you use to improve your retention of the material? Would love to hear more ideas to include in this section.

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June 2, 2009

Audio Versions of Books from The 100 Best

Filed under: 100 Best — Todd Sattersten @ 12:48 pm
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We have been getting more questions lately about what books from The 100 Best are available in audio.

That lead us to do some research and it turns out that 37 of our selections are available in compact disc, digitally through Audible/iTunes, or both.

We have updated our Books in the 100 Best page with links to those editions.

Happy Listening.

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May 28, 2009

Our Book in NYC

Filed under: 100 Best,Misc. — Tags: 100 Best, General Business, New York City, Travel — Roy @ 9:55 am
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This past weekend I took the weekend off to visit some friends in Hoboken and whilst traveling around to various hot-spots on the Jersey shore and Manhattan, I stumbled upon our book: The 100 Best Business Books Ever all over the place!

Well 2 places, but still, kinda neat! I took some pictures of it amongst the masses of other books!

Here it is at New York City’s Port Authority:

nyc-may-2009-121

nyc-may-2009-120

And here it is at Grand Central Station:

nyc-may-2009-062

nyc-may-2009-061

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