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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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June 11, 2009

Podcast with Hugh MacLeod

Filed under: Audio,Jack Covert Selects,Marketing,New Releases,Personal Development — Jon @ 1:02 pm
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artist

Hugh MacLeod’s book, Ignore Everybody was released today. It was also reviewed as a Jack Covert Selects title.

I recently had a chance to talk to Hugh about the book, creativity, work, passion, and how these things all came together for him. The book reveals this as well, and is an inspiring piece of literature for those who want to pursue their creative drive, and aren’t afraid to get a little dirty in the process.

Click below to hear our conversation:

[podcast]http://media.800ceoread.com/view/9781591842590/audio/Ignore_Everybody_Interview_with_Hugh_MacLeod.mp3[/podcast]

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June 5, 2009

Twitter Quotes From May

Filed under: Communication,General Management,Personal Development,Small Business — Todd Sattersten @ 9:49 am
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Here are some of the nuggets we have been retweeting over the past month:

@asimburney – Is it that hard to write business books without American sport metaphors?? what the hell is a yardline? come to think of it what’s a yard???

“One of the BEST business books ever is “The Little Engine That Could.” according to @successtool

@outdoor_girly – Theory: successful people read best selling business books, wildly successful read random books (philosophy), normal people just don’t read

@kbarnesrtp Just finished Death by Meeting by Lencioni. Highly recommend esp. if you like biz books in story format (e.g., The Goal).

@mktgdouchebag Start With No is the greatest book written about successful negotiations. I read it twice; most biz books bore me.

@benjonjeffery Business books you disagree with are just as good as the inspirational ones because they reveal what you think. (Amen.)

@alanmwebber First Rule of Holes: when in one, stop digging. Second Rule of Holes: know where you should be digging. #rulesofthumb

@meganauman why must business books always be published in hardcover first? i hate hardcover

@AppointmentPlus There are certain books you should read at least once a year. On the top of the list: E-Myth Revisited.

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May 22, 2009

Smove

Filed under: Personal Development — Todd Sattersten @ 12:20 pm
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Here is a little something for you on the Friday afternoon. In the States, we have a three day weekend. I thought this was a nice way to end the week.

You can buy Smile & Move on givemore.com.

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May 1, 2009

Tweet-a-tweet-Tweet Recap

Filed under: Big Ideas,Careers,General Business,General Management,Personal Development,Publishing Industry,Strategy — Todd Sattersten @ 2:05 pm
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We posted quite a bit over on twitter this week. We tried pulling together what we saw people saying about business books, recommendations for business books and some ideas around the future of publishing at large. Here is the what we found:

# Authors 4 #followfriday @gladwell @stevenbJohnson @danielpink @alanmwebber @jack_welch @suzywelch @johncmaxwell @tonyrobbins @Rich_Dad about 4 hours ago from web

# RT @TalentAcquisit The Art of War by Sun Tzu is 1 of the best business strategy books. For business strategy check out http://www.sonshi.com 9:18 PM Apr 29th from web

# RT @charlesseybold Books: finished Predictably Irrational (****), starting Art of Profitability (v good so far), biz novel like The Goal 1:52 PM Apr 29th from web

# @kennypratt yes, here is the mystery box url: http://800ceoread.com/mysterybox 10:04 PM Apr 28th from web

# RT @tomewing:The Cluetrain Manifesto is the Velvet Underground of biz books: everyone who read it formed a dodgy start-up. (via @ricklevine) 3:57 PM Apr 28th from web

# RT @mdrips Escape from Cubicle Nation is ok; Think Big Manifesto totally sucks; Me 2.0 is mediocre. Few biz books are worthwhile. 3:56 PM Apr 28th from web

# RT @robbiebax @BtoBGuru great non-social media biz books 2008 “forces for Good” “back of the napkin” “predictably irrational“–loved em all! 3:02 PM Apr 28th from web

# RT @whgtoga Cool book ! One of the top 100 biz books of all time. (CEO READ) The Story Factor- Annette Simmons. 2:57 PM Apr 28th from web

# Great to see @jack_welch joining Twitternation today.2:38 PM Apr 28th from web

# oops RT @sarahcannon Finished reading Tribes over wkend, halfway thru The Tipping Point this wk. Both read too easily to be biz books…2:35 PM Apr 28th from web

# @sarahcannon Finished reading Tribes over wkend, halfway thru The Tipping Point this wk. Both read too easily to be biz books…2:35 PM Apr 28th from web

# Looking for what business books to read? Check out our 377 reviews – http://800ceoread.com/blog/… 3:52 PM Apr 27th from web

# RT @Techmeme Amazon Acquires Stanza, an E-book Application for the iPhone (Brad Stone/Bits) http://bit.ly/JkHFz (via @debbiestier)3:42 PM Apr 27th from web

# RT @sharif28 Just kick-started my daily reading regimen by ordering 3 new books: Tribes, Business Stripped Bare and the Think Big Manifesto.3:33 PM Apr 27th from web

# RT @LauraJDaley My two favorite biz books are Primal Leadership & A Whole New Mind. 12:00 PM Apr 26th from web

# You can follow Nancy at @nancyduarte.12:00 PM Apr 26th from web

# Nancy Duarte on passion and purpose – http://bit.ly/JFNAX The Element, Outliers, and Talent Is Overrated all intersect here. 11:58 AM Apr 26th from web

# RT @chinasolved Pirated biz-books now @ my sbwy sta. Saw ‘Black Swan’ ‘Essential Drucker” & ‘Outliers’ for 10 rbm each. 10:51 AM Apr 26th from web

# RT @fredwilson: Kenny Lerer is co-founder of HuffPo & here’s his thoughts on newspapers http://bit.ly/v8Z0y

You can follow us at @800ceoread or jump over to our twitter page.

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April 8, 2009

Links from Across The Business Book Web

Filed under: Information Technology,Lists,Personal Development — Todd Sattersten @ 3:59 pm
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There are a number of cool, quick items to point you to:

  • Dan Schawbel’s Me 2.0 came out yesterday. You can preview the book at Scribd for the next week or so.
  • Joel Comm is offering the first two chapters of his new book Twitter Power for free. You can download it for at http://twitterpower.com/free/.
  • For the current economic times, look for a new Dr. Suess book next week called “Suess-isms for Success: Insider Tips on Economic Health from the Good Doctor.” I just saw this in USA Today, so when we have a little more info, we’ll pass it along.
  • The Street.com has a quick rundown of nine new books that writer Marc Kramer says contain “recession-worthy insights.” Problem-Solving 101, Unlocking Opportunities for Growth and Hit The Ground Running are among the selections.
  • Jay Ehret from The Marketing Spot has a post called Change Your Future (and Fortune) by Reading a Business Book. He talks about different kinds of business books, how to read them, and shares the results from a survey he ran about how people use business books.
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March 30, 2009

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
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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

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March 23, 2009

Your Correspondent Reports Back from SXSWi

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

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February 18, 2009

Titles Now in Spanish!

Filed under: Advertising,Foreign Titles,General Business,General Management,Global Business,Leadership,Marketing,Personal Development,Safety, Health, and Wellness,Sales — Roy @ 9:24 am
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Here are some new titles that are currently from Urano and Roca publishers. If you don’t speak/read Spanish, then perhaps you know someone that does. I’ve linked to the English versions where applicable – check them out as well!

Mate a Sus Vacas Sagradas or Death to All Sacred Cows by David Bernstein, Beau Fraser and Bill Schwab: Written by the owners of advertising agency The Gate Worldwide, this book aims to take the sacred cows of business out to pasture, showing how adages like ‘always trust your research’, ‘success breeds success’ and ‘the customer is always right’, are not only old and tired but may lead a business completely astray.

Planeta Sediento, Recursos Menguantes or Thirsty Planet, Dwindling Resources by Michael T. Klare: Recently, an unprecedented Chinese attempt to acquire the major American energy firm Unocal was blocked by Congress amidst hysterical warnings of a Communist threat. But the political grandstanding missed a larger point: the takeover of a new structure of world power, based not on market forces or on arms and armies but on the possession of vital natural resources.

Mejora esa Actitud or Improving this Attitude by Jerry Minchinton: Each of us, without exception, is born with innate talens and skills that too often are not developed due to be blocked by negative thougths and attitudes. The purpose of this book is to encourage those talents and help open new opportunities and ideas. If you have mental or emotional patterns that stop you from active participation in life, now you know how to change them. To achieve the changes you want, you must look after the seeds of your future care and feeling well.

Happy Reading and/or Referring these Titles!

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February 17, 2009

Dan Pink interviewed by Oprah

Filed under: Big Ideas,Personal Development — Tom Ehrenfeld @ 12:59 pm
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In case you missed it, here is Oprah’s interview with Dan Pink, featured in the December 2008 issue of O, The Oprah Magazine. Oprah interviewed Dan about “how right-brain thinkers are wired for 21st-century success,” a concept from his groundbreaking book A Whole New Mind.
Dan Pink is also the author of Free Agent Nation, The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, and the forthcoming DRIVE: The Surprising Truth About Human Motivation and How It Can Change Your Life (out in December ’09).
Read the entire interview on oprah.com.
Here’s a snippet from the dialogue:
Oprah: Let’s talk about a right-brain ability you think we should all develop.
Daniel: I’d say “design.” Design is the ability to create something that has significance as well as usefulness. Even hospitals are bringing in designers to redo waiting rooms. A young designer in New York re-created the prescription bottle because she noticed that her grandparents were getting their medications confused. She put the medicine’s name in large type at the top instead of the doctor’s name, and Grandpa gets a green band on his medicine bottle and Grandma gets a yellow band so they can see the difference more clearly. That’s an example of how design can literally save lives.
Oprah: How do we begin to create more design in our lives?
Daniel: Carry a notebook and write down examples of good and poor design. After a week, you’ll begin to realize that nearly everything is the product of a design decision. The type of lid you put on the cup of coffee you bought this morning was a design decision. So were the shoes you’re wearing.
Oprah: Before reading your book, I’d always thought of design in terms of fashion. But then I started noticing the plates that I chose for my home, the kinds of kitchen counters, the knobs, the cabinets, all were about the design.
Daniel: I’m not trying to turn everyone into star designers. I’m trying to help people become more literate about design.
(Photo by George Burns. Source: www.oprah.com.)

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