Monday, November 30, 2009

Learn to Earn A Beginners Guide to the Basics of Investing and Business or Selling the Invisible

Learn to Earn: A Beginner's Guide to the Basics of Investing and Business

Author: Peter Lynch

Mutual-fund superstar Peter Lynch and author John Rothchild explain the basic principles of investing and business in a primer that will enlighten and entertain anyone who is high-school age or older.

Many investors, including some with substantial portfolios, have only the sketchiest idea of how the stock market works. The reason, say Lynch and Rothchild, is that the basics of investing -- the fundamentals of our economic system and what they have to do with the stock market -- aren't taught in school. At a time when individuals have to make important decisions about saving for college and 401(k) retirement funds, this failure to provide a basic education in investing can have tragic consequences.

For those who know what to look for, investment opportunities are everywhere. The average high-school student is familiar with Nike, Reebok, McDonald's, the Gap, and the Body Shop. Nearly every teenager in America drinks Coke or Pepsi, but only a very few own shares in either company or even understand how to buy them. Every student studies American history, but few realize that our country was settled by European colonists financed by public companies in England and Holland -- and the basic principles behind public companies haven't changed in more than 300 years.

In Learn to Earn, Lynch and Rothchild explain in a style accessible to anyone who is high-school age or older how to read a stock table in the daily newspaper, how to understand a company annual report, and why everyone should pay attention to the stock market. They explain not only how to invest, but also how to think like an investor.



Table of Contents:
Preface9
Introduction: The Companies Around Us13
1A Short History of Capitalism21
2The Basics of Investing92
3The Lives of a Company170
4The Invisible Hands201
Appendix 1: Stockpicking Tools243
Appendix 2: Reading the Numbers - How to Decipher a Balance Sheet251
Index265

Book about: Pasta or 101 Things to Do with Meatballs

Selling the Invisible

Author: Harry Beckwith

A treasury of hundreds of quick, practical, and easy-to-read strategies - few are more than a page long - Selling the Invisible will open your eyes to new ideas in this crucial branch of marketing including why focus groups, value-price positioning, discount pricing, and being the best usually fail; the critical emotion that most influences your prospects - and how to deal with it; the vital role of vividness, focus, "anchors," and stereotypes; the importance of Halo, Cocktail Party, and Lake Wobegon Effects; marketing lessons from black holes, grocery lists, the Hearsay Rule, and the fame of Pikes Peak; dozens of proven yet consistently over-looked ideas for research, presentations, publicity, advertising, and client retention...and much more.

Publishers Weekly

It's unfortunate that the author, founder of Minneapolis's Beckwith Advertising and Marketing, and his editor didn't spend more time on this book, intended to help service businesses sell their products. They could have eliminated the endless repetition; for example, we are told four times that clients aren't buying a service provider's expertise but are buying a relationship. A tightly focused, engaging book would have offered more useful advice. Beckwith underscores the concept that a brilliant marketing plan is virtually useless if your service is less than first-rate. He talks about the importance of pricing the service to correctly reflect the value of what is offered and why small firms should not be afraid to trumpet that they are small. But by the time we have heard again that McDonald's is really selling not food but entertainment, we aren't as receptive to Beckwith's message as we might be. BOMC alternate; Time Warner audio. (Mar.)

Library Journal

"Don't sell the steak. Sell the sizzle." In today's service business, author Beckwith suggests this old marketing adage is likely to guarantee failure. In this timely addition to the management genre, Beckwith summarizes key points about selling services learned from experience with his own advertising and marketing firm and when he worked with Fortune 500 companies. The focus here is on the core of service marketing: improving the service, which no amount of clever marketing can make up for if not accomplished. Other key concepts emphasize listening to the customer, selling the long-term relationship, identifying what a business is really selling, recognizing clues about a business that may be conveyed to customers, focusing on the single most important message about the business, and other practical strategies relevant to any service business. Actor Jeffrey Jones's narration professionally conveys these excellent ideas appropriate for public libraries.Dale Farris, Groves, Tex.

Michael Pellecchia

Selling the Invisible: A Field Guide to Modern Marketing is about marketing services rather than products. As founder of Beckwith Advertising and Marketing in Minneapolis, he has had some stellar clients, including McDonald's, Shearson Lehman Hutton, Smith Barney, Chase Manhattan Bank and Musicland. Beckwith's distinct personality comes through in this collection of very brief essays. His stories, many from his personal experience, remind me of the friendly arrogance of other legendary marketers such as David Ogilvy and Stanley Marcus. Sure, some of the anecdotes merely come from other business books, such as the oft-told tale of how Swiss watchmakers invented the quartz digital watch but lost out to the Japanese, who successfully marketed the watches. But one chapter is by itself worth the price of the book--the 25 pages on "Planning: The Eighteen Fallacies." In this chapter, Beckwith debunks commonplace notions such as strategy, patience, intelligence, facts, memory, experience, confidence and other purported positives in business. Another great chapter on branding is called "Monogram Your Shirts, Not Your Company."

Terry O'Keefe

Most of the things we buy today are unreal and intangible--services that don't exist at the time we place the order, and non-products which can't be seen, tasted, kicked, tried on or tried out. What used to be a product-driven world is now replete with services. So, unlike the product-driven economy of just a generation ago, almost everyone is now selling service. And, says Beckwith, when it comes to marketing, the differences between products and services are oceanic. To help us bridge that gap he has written Selling the Invisible, and the book is superb. Most readers will be thankful that nothing too weighty is presented here--just a smorgasboard of creative thoughts and intelligent suggestions regarding how to make sales in a service market. Many of these ideas should make you think about your business in entirely new ways. Busy readers will love how this book is organized. Beckwith offers several hundred bite-sized pieces that you can dip into a couple of minutes at a time. If you are the principle marketeer in your business, I can't imagine how you can come away with less than your money's worth from this book.



Why We Buy or The Speed of Trust

Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping

Author: Paco Underhill

Is there a method to our madness when it comes to shopping? Hailed by the San Francisco Chronicle as "a Sherlock Holmes for retailers," author and research company CEO Paco Underhill answers with a definitive "yes" in this witty, eye-opening report on our ever-evolving consumer culture. Why We Buy is based on hard data gleaned from thousands of hours of field research–in shopping malls, department stores, and supermarkets across America. With his team of sleuths tracking our every move, Paco Underhill lays bare the struggle among merchants, marketers, and increasingly knowledgeable consumers for control.

CBS News's 48 Hours - Dan Rather

Meet a man who probably knows more than you do about the urge to splurge.

Todd Pruzan

By the fourth chapter of Paco Underhill's engrossing new study of our shopping behavior, Why We Buy, you'll have noticed that the author is something of a semiotics master, and probably a bit off his nut. Underhill describes a "eureka moment" that occurred on a sultry August night as he listened to a Yanks game while screening hours of silent, grainy videotape from a drugstore's wall-mounted camera: "I was...witnessing a shopper trying to juggle several small bottles and boxes without dropping one. That's when it dawned on me: The poor guy needed a basket."

Underhill's taste for shopping porn comes in handy at Envirosell, his Manhattan retail-design consultancy, where he's spent more than 20 years interviewing customers (and scrutinizing them from behind potted plants) in order to teach stores, both real and virtual, how to be nicer to us so we'll buy more, and with more pleasure. And his first book -- probably the first book -- on the sociology and psychology of shopping comes as a revelation. Underhill does for the American store what Jane Jacobs did for the American city: He tells us not how retail spaces manipulate us so much as how they fail and succeed at stimulating us.

Why We Buy divulges more about your behavior than you may know yourself: How you ignore items shoved onto the bottom shelf. How you like touching the merchandise, whether it's paperbacks or underwear. How you vacate a store after getting bumped in a narrow aisle (the "butt-brush" factor). But if you think you'll feel silly upon learning that Underhill may have trained a camera on your consumerist ass as you tried to cram it into a pair of Gap khakis, take heart: It's the retailers and product marketers who really look ridiculous. For his research usually yields deceptively simple results -- the kind of thing that should make store planners clap their palms to their foreheads -- and Why We Buy documents their sins with gleeful astonishment. There's the maternity store with aisles too small to handle baby strollers, so its stock doesn't sell. There's the supermarket that shelves its kiddie popcorn at adult-eye level, so it doesn't sell. There's the pound-foolish mattress outlet displaying a $2,000 model without sheets or pillows, so customers can't test-drive it...and it doesn't sell.

Underhill has an inquisitive worldview and a winning voice that reinforces his irrefutable logic. For a book categorized as "psychology/business," Why We Buy is surprisingly well written, even weaving in wry cinema verite: "Stand over here. Behind the underwear. What do you see? A couple?...Hold on -- what's he saying?" The author treads thin ice just once, when he complains that entertainment media "do a fairly poor job of creating packages with the merchandising function in mind." But books and CDs have more emotional value than vacuum cleaners or Big Macs; yes, covers are hard to read from across the store, but we keep these "packages" forever. (Such disappointing logic seems to inform the book's drab but easy-to-read jacket design. Would we really enjoy shopping more if all books looked this dull?)

Still, Why We Buy is immensely valuable for its numerous lessons, which seem obvious only once we understand what we want out of shopping. It's great that someone has explained our habits to us. Now, if only the stores would pay more attention.
&151; Salon

Fortune

...[S]crupulously maps the familiar realm of retail...

The New York Times Book Review - Patricia T. O'Conner

...Here is a book that gives smart shopping the respect it deserves....Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping is a testament to the nobility, the courage...of the average shopper....In the end, we learn, there's more to the retail experience than trading money for goods.

Paula Dempsey, DePaul University Library, Chicago - Library Journal

The title for this treatment of marketing research in the retail setting is misleading. Underhill, founder of the behavioral research company Envirosell, summarizes some of the firm's conclusions about the interaction between consumers and products and consumers and commercial spaces. He lays claim to the research techniques of urban anthropology, but his casual, self-congratulatory tone and loose organization make the book inappropriate for academic use. Underhill breezes through anecdotes about how observing the mundane details of shopping improves retail sales, but there is limited grounding in the framework of his "science." Given the lack of recent titles on the topic, this is recommended for large collections with an emphasis on retailing.

Fortune

...[S]crupulously maps the familiar realm of retail...

The New York Times Book Review - Patricia T. O'Conner

...[H]ere is a book that gives [smart shopping] the respect it deserves....Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping is a testament to the nobility, the courage...of the average shopper....In the end, we learn, there's more to the retail experience than trading money for goods.

Business Week - Green

Why We Buy is useful as a how-to for retailers, but shoppers will discover a Vance Packard for our times, on the trail of our century's hidden persuaders.

Kirkus Reviews

Shopping is one of the defining qualities of modern civilization, but this author convincingly argues that consumers may have a greater impact on the act of shopping than shopping has on them. Just as social scientists study people in natural conditions, Underhill studies consumers in retail environments. He's no academic, however, but a "real-world" consultant with such clients as McDonald's, General Mills, and the US Postal Service. Although Underhill's work involves a certain amount of intuition and creative thinking, it's primarily based on hard evidence: the measurements accumulated by teams of trackers working on the floors and behind the scenes of retail establishments. Details gathered from observation of consumers pinpoint problems with products, shelving, signage, register lines, and other factors. Such monitoring prompted one of the author's key insights—that any space in which people are likely to be jostled from behind can lead to shopper discomfort (dubbed "butt sensitivity"). The solution: wider aisles. Underhill explores both similarities and differentiating features in the shopping experiences of varied groups, including the distinctive ways in which men and women browse and make purchasing decisions. His dissection of the retail industry finds much to criticize, but the book also dignifies shopping as a central focus of human activity. The author's company, whose work is cited throughout, has earned its way by spotting flaws and advising retail owners on how to fix them, not merely to boost profits, but because the profits come from improving the quality of the shopping experience for customers. Underhill also analyzes the emerging arena of onlineshopping, offering tips for improved performance. Sales here will accelerate, the author believes, but they don't fundamentally threaten the future of old-fashioned human sales interactions. A strong portrait of consumers as the most efficient arbiters of what to sell and how to sell it. (Author tour)

What People Are Saying

Faith Popcorn
The Dalai Lama said, `Shopping is the museum of the twentieth century.' Paco Underhill explains why. Brilliantly.
— (Faith Popcorn, author and future forecaster)


M. G. Lord
In Why We Buy, Paco Underhill, who invented the science of shopping, turns state's evidence, alerting consumers to the traps retailers set for them. The book is always eye-opening, sometimes chilling, often funny and never dull. It will change the way you experience department stores, supermarkets, even racks of men's underwear — behind which one of Underhill's researchers may be taking notes on your behavior.
— (M. G. Lord, author of Forever Barbie)


Michael Gould
Why We Buy is a funny and insightful book for people on both sides of the retail counter.
— (Michael Gould, CEO, Bloomingdales)


Robin Lewis
Paco Underhill has turned the retail store into a very enlightening entertaining theater where all the customers are actors. Paco's work is brilliant, fun, and informative.
— (Robin Lewis, vice president and group executive editor, Fairchild Publications)


Marc Winkelman
As The Hidden Persuaders did for the 1950s, Why We Buy, defines the American consumer entering the twenty-first century.


Read also Internet Guide to Food Safety and Security or James Beards Poultry

The Speed of Trust: The One Thing that Changes Everything

Author: Stephen M R Covey

In the riveting style of The Tipping Point, Stephen M. R. Covey uncovers the overlooked and underestimated power of trust in a gripping look into what he calls "the one thing that changes everything." Groundbreaking and paradigm-shifting, The Speed of Trust demonstrates that trust is a hard-edged, economic driver—a learnable and measurable skill that makes organizations more profitable, people more promotable, and relationships more energizing.

The former CEO of Covey Leadership Center (founded by his father, Dr. Stephen R. Covey), Covey draws on his experience leading a $100 million enterprise to explain how trust can help you create unparalleled success and sustainable prosperity in every dimension of life. He reveals the 13 Behaviors common to high-trust leaders and persuasively demonstrates actionable insights that will enable you to increase and inspire trust in all of your important relationships. The Speed of Trust presents a road map to establish trust on every level, build character and competence, enhance credibility, and create leadership that inspires confidence.

Publishers Weekly

Trust is so integral to our relationships that we often take it for granted, yet in an era marked by business scandals and a desire for accountability this book by leadership expert Covey is a welcome guide to nurturing trust in our professional and personal lives. Drawing on anecdotes and business cases from his years as CEO of the Covey Leadership Center (which was worth $160 million when he orchestrated its 1997 merger with Franklin Quest to form Franklin Covey), the author effectively reminds us that there's plenty of room for improvement on this virtue. Following a touching foreword by father Stephen R. Covey (author of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and related books), the junior Covey outlines 13 behaviors of trust-inspiring leaders, such as demonstrating respect, creating transparency, righting wrongs, delivering results and practicing accountability. Covey's down-to-earth approach and disarming personal stories go a long way to establish rapport with his reader, though the book's length and occasional lack of focus sometimes obscure its good advice. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In his first book, Covey (CEO, CoveyLink Worldwide), son of Stephen R. Covey of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People fame, explores the concept of trust and its positive impact on personal and professional success. He introduces the image of ever-widening concentric ripples of water, which he defines as the "Five Waves of Trust": Self-Trust, Relationship Trust, Organizational Trust, Market Trust, and Societal Trust. The degree and magnitude of trust one develops at each wave impacts the effectiveness of interactions at the next highest level, and the stronger the trust involved at each level, the more efficiently and quickly the desired outputs of that level can be achieved. Covey has an engaging style and uses many anecdotes and quotes from famous people to illustrate his points. The book's organization into waves, behaviors of High Trust Leaders, and Cores of Credibility makes the prose easy to digest and reminiscent of the format of the leadership seminars from which Covey got his start. This book would be of interest to public libraries and universities with self-help, psychology, or popular business collections. Crystal Renfro, Lib. and Information Ctr., Georgia Inst. of Technology, Atlanta Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Soundview Summary</p> - Soundview Executive Book Summaries

There is one thing that is common to every individual, relationship, team, family, organization, nation, economy and civilization throughout the world - one thing which, if removed, will destroy the most powerful government, the most successful business, the most thriving economy, the most influential leadership, the greatest friendship, the strongest character, the deepest love.

On the other hand, if developed and leveraged, that one thing has the potential to create unparalleled success and prosperity in every dimension of life. That one thing is trust.

The Five Waves of Trust model serves as a metaphor for how trust operates in our lives. This summary will cover these forms as the structure for understanding and making trust actionable, including a look at the Four Cores of credibility and the 13 Behaviors of high trust leaders.

Nothing Is as Fast as the Speed of Trust
Simply put, trust means confidence. The opposite of trust - distrust - is suspicion. The difference between a high and low trust relationship is palpable. Take communication. In a high trust relationship, you can say the wrong thing, and people will still get your meaning. In a low trust relationship, you can be very measured, even precise, and they'll still misinterpret you.

You don't need to look far to realize that, as a global society, we have a crisis of trust on our hands. Low trust is everywhere. On the organizational level, trust within companies has sharply declined. But relationships of all kinds are built on and sustained by trust. They can also be broken down and destroyed by a lack of trust.

Society, organizations and relationships aside, there's an even more fundamental and powerful dimension to self trust. If we can't trust ourselves, we'll have a hard time trusting others. Personal incongruence is often the source of our suspicions of others.

Economics of Trust
Trust always affects two outcomes: speed and cost. When trust goes down, speed goes down and cost goes up. Consider the time and cost of airport security after 9/11, or costs for Sarbanes-Oxley Act compliance, passed in the U.S. in response to Enron, WorldCom and other corporate scandals. When trust goes up, speed goes up and cost goes down. Warren Buffet completed the acquisition of McLane Distribution from Wal-Mart on the basis of a two-hour meeting. Because of high trust between the parties, the merger took less than a month and avoided the usual months and millions for due diligence and attorneys.

The serious practical impact of the economics of trust is that we are paying a hidden low-trust tax right off the top - and we don't even know it!

A company can have an excellent strategy and a strong ability to execute; but the net result can be torpedoed by a low-trust tax or multiplied by a high-trust dividend. This makes a powerful business case for trust, assuring that it is not a soft, "nice to have" quality.

One of the reasons this hidden variable is so significant in today's world is that we have entered a global, knowledge worker economy that revolves around partnering and relationships. The ability to establish, grow, extend and restore trust with all stakeholders - customers, suppliers and co-workers - is the key leadership competency of the new, global economy.

Inspiring Trust
Trust is a whole life choice, and until you are actually in a front line situation, you will not even see the full power of the Cores and Behaviors on speed, cost and trust. Look immediately for ways to apply them and find opportunities to teach them to others. You will see how the of speed of trust; the profits of the economics of trust; the relevance of the pervasive impact of trust; and the dividends of trust can significantly enhance the quality of every relationship on every level of your life.

You may still be hesitant or fearful when it comes to actually extending trust, but leaders who extend trust become mentors, models and heroes. Inspiring trust is the prime differentiator between a manager and a leader and the prime motivator of successful enterprises and relationships. Companies that choose to extend trust to their employees become great places to work. Children develop character and competence in the care of parents who love them, believe in them and trust them.

Most people respond well to trust and do not abuse it. We are all born with a propensity to trust and choosing to retain or restore that propensity is key to our ability to forgive. We have countless opportunities to extend and inspire trust to others, but it also makes a difference in our own lives. Trust is reciprocal. Copyright © 2006 Soundview Executive Book Summaries



Table of Contents:
Foreword   Dr. Stephen R. Covey     xxiii
The One Thing That Changes Everything     1
Nothing Is as Fast as the Speed of Trust     3
You Can Do Something About This!     27
The First Wave-Self Trust: The Principle of Credibility     41
The 4 Cores of Credibility     43
Integrity Are You Congruent?     59
Intent What's Your Agenda?     73
Capabilities Are You Relevant?     91
Results What's Your Track Record?     109
The Second Wave-Relationship Trust: The Principle of Behavior     125
The 13 Behaviors     127
Talk Straight     136
Demonstrate Respect     144
Create Transparency     152
Right Wrongs     158
Show Loyalty     165
Deliver Results     172
Get Better     177
Confront Reality     185
Clarify Expectations     192
Practice Accountability     200
Listen First     208
Keep Commitments     215
Extend Trust     222
Creating an Action Plan     230
The Third, Fourth, and Fifth Waves-Stakeholder Trust     233
The ThirdWave-Organizational Trust The Principle of Alignment     236
The Fourth Wave-Market Trust The Principle of Reputation     261
The Fifth Wave-Societal Trust The Principle of Contribution     272
Inspiring Trust     285
Extending "Smart Trust"     287
Restoring Trust When It Has Been Lost     300
A Propensity to Trust     316
Notes and References     325
Index     339

Sunday, November 29, 2009

What Color Is Your Parachute for Teens or Advanced Accounting

What Color Is Your Parachute? for Teens: Discovering Yourself, Defining Your Future

Author: Richard Nelson Bolles

Based on Richard Nelson Bolles's What Color Is Your Parachute?, the best-selling job-hunting book in the world, What Color Is Your Parachute? for Teens teaches high school and college students to zero in on their favorite skills and apply that knowledge to get the most out of school, set goals, and find their dream jobs. Filled with interactive exercises, worksheets, and profiles of young adults who have found their unique paths in life, What Color Is Your Parachute? for Teens is a crucial book for every teenager who cares about his or her future.

Publishers Weekly

After helping a generation of adults with assessing their careers, the authors turn to those just embarking on a profession in What Color Is Your Parachute? For Teens by Richard Nelson Bolles and Carol Christen with Jean M. Blomquist. They begin by prompting readers to consider their interests, the kinds of people they enjoy and their ideal work environment, and round out the text with quizzes, writing exercises and teen testimonials designed to get teens thinking. Then they offer concrete ideas on how to gain experience (internships, Web sites, etc.) and prepare for interviews. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

What People Are Saying

Ann Reynolds
"...a great job simplifying the 400 pages of What Color Is Your Parachute? into a 166-page guide for young people."
Career Resources Manager, Worklife International, Australia




New interesting textbook: Forgotten Man or Fooled by Randomness

Advanced Accounting

Author: Joe Ben Hoyl

The approach used by Hoyle, Schaefer, and Doupnik in the new edition allows students to think critically about accounting, just as they will do while preparing for the CPA exam. With this text, students gain a well-balanced appreciation of the Accounting profession. The 9th edition introduces the students to the field's many aspects, while focusing on past and present resolutions. The text continues to show the development of financial reporting as a product of intense and considered debate that continues today and into the future.

Booknews

The latest edition of a standard text (2nd edition was 1987) adds new chapters on international accounting and on trusts and estates, as well as expanded coverage of consolidation accounting. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:
Ch. 1The equity method of accounting for investments1
Ch. 2Consolidation of financial information35
Ch. 3Consolidations - subsequent to the date of acquisition93
Ch. 4Consolidated financial statements and outside ownership155
Ch. 5Consolidated financial statements - intercompany asset transactions211
Ch. 6Variable interest entities, intercompany debt, consolidated cash flows, and other issues258
Ch. 7Consolidated financial statements - ownership patterns and income taxes314
Ch. 8Segment and interim reporting364
Ch. 9Foreign currency transactions and hedging foreign exchange risk409
Ch. 10Translation of foreign currency financial statements469
Ch. 11Worldwide accounting diversity and international standards524
Ch. 12Financial reporting and the securities and exchange commission566
Ch. 13Accounting for legal reorganizations and liquidations590
Ch. 14Partnerships : formation and operation632
Ch. 15Partnerships : termination and liquidation670
Ch. 16Accounting for state and local governments (part 1)706
Ch. 17Accounting for state and local governments (part 2)756
Ch. 18Accounting and reporting for private not-for-profit organizations814
Ch. 19Accounting for estates and trusts853

Death by Meeting or Writers Market 2009

Death by Meeting: A Leadership Fable About Solving the Most Painful Problem in Business

Author: Patrick M Lencioni

Casey McDaniel had never been so nervous in his life.

In just ten minutes, The Meeting, as it would forever be known, would begin.  Casey had every reason to believe that his performance over the next two hours would determine the fate of his career, his financial future, and the company he had built from scratch.

“How could my life have unraveled so quickly?” he wondered.

In his latest page-turning work of business fiction, best-selling author Patrick Lencioni provides readers with another powerful and thought-provoking book, this one centered around a cure for the most painful yet underestimated problem of modern business: bad meetings.  And what he suggests is both simple and revolutionary.

Casey McDaniel, the founder and CEO of Yip Software, is in the midst of a problem he created, but one he doesn’t know how to solve.  And he doesn’t know where or who to turn to for advice.  His staff can’t help him; they’re as dumbfounded as he is by their tortuous meetings.

Then an unlikely advisor, Will Peterson, enters Casey’s world.  When he proposes an unconventional, even radical, approach to solving the meeting problem, Casey is just desperate enough to listen.

As in his other books, Lencioni provides a framework for his groundbreaking model, and makes it applicable to the real world.  Death by Meeting is nothing short of a blueprint for leaders who want to eliminate waste and frustration among their teams, and create environments of engagement and passion.

Publishers Weekly

The business meeting-a necessary evil or a vital and invigorating component of running an organization? According to management consultant Lencioni (The Five Temptations of a CEO), meetings should fit the latter description, but more often than not, he says, they don't. In this lackluster audio fable, Lencioni offers practical advice on how to revitalize your business by energizing your business meetings, but his pallid, passive prose would challenge the most skilled narrator, and Arthur is no exception. The voice Arthur lends Will, the young hero of this tale, resembles that of Sesame Street's Ernie on downers, and the various inflections he gives business owner Casey McDaniel and his management team don't make up for the characters' lack of character. Nevertheless, Lencioni's message comes across loud and clear-meetings should be interactive, not passive, and they should be structured (i.e., issues of immediate importance should be discussed in "weekly tactical" meetings, and issues that will fundamentally affect the business should be addressed in "monthly strategic" meetings). Although managers will find this advice worthwhile, they would gather just as much if they skipped the sluggish fable and listened to the last few tracks. Simultaneous release with the Wiley hardcover. (Mar.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

What People Are Saying

Ken Wilcox
Death By Meeting is about much more than meetings; it's about an entire management philosophy. I read a lot of books on management, and Lencioni's are among the very best. They form the basis for our approach at Silicon Valley Bank. (CEO, Silicon Valley Bank)


Kris Hagerman
Finally, a real solution to an age old problem. Meetings may never be the same. (executive vice president, Strategic Operations, VERITAS Software Corporation)




Table of Contents:
Introduction.

The Fable.

Preview.

Part One: Flashback.

Part Two: Plot Point.

Part Three: Protagonist.

Part Four: Action.

Part Five: Resolution.

The Model.

The Paradox of Meetings.

Executive Summary.

Problem #1: Lack of Drama.

Problem #2: Lack of Contextual Structure.

The Biggest Challenge of All: “The Myth of Too Many Meetings”.

A Final Thought on Meetings.

The Weekly Tactical Meeting Guide.

Acknowledgments.

About the Author.

Go to: George Washington on Leadership or Going Overboard

Writer's Market 2009

Author: Brewer

For 88 years, Writer's Market has given fiction and nonfiction writers the information they need to sell their work--from completely up-to-date listings to exclusive interviews with successful writers. The 2009 edition provides all this and more with over 3,500 listings for book publishers, magazines and literary agents, in addition to a completely updated freelance rate chart. In addition to the thousands of market listings, writers will find up-to-date information on becoming a successful freelancer covering everything from writing query letters to launching a freelance business, and more.



Saturday, November 28, 2009

Rich Dad Poor Dad or The 48 Laws of Power

Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids about Money -- That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!

Author: Robert T Kiyosaki

Argues that a good education and secure job are not guarantees of financial success, and presents advice for accumulating wealth.

USA Today

A startling point for anyone lookng to gain control of their financial future.

Library Journal

Reissuing a self-published best seller.



New interesting book: New Hope for People with Diabetes or Tibetan AyurVeda

The 48 Laws of Power

Author: Robert Green

Cunning, instructive, and amoral, this controversial bestseller distills 3,000 years of the history of power into 48 well-explicated laws. Law 1: Never Outshine the Master. Law 3: Conceal Your Intentions. Law 7: Get Others to Do the Work for You, but Always Take the Credit. Law 15: Crush Your Enemy Totally. Law 33: Discover Each Man's Thumbscrew.

These are the laws of power in their unvarnished essence—the philosophies of Machiavelli (The Prince), Sun-tzu (The Art of War), Carl von Clausewitz, Talleyrand, the great seducer Casanova, con man Yellow Kid Weil, and other legendary thinkers and schemers. They teach prudence, stealth, mastery of one's emotions, the art of deception, and the total absence of mercy. Like it or not, all have practical applications in real life.

Each law is illustrated with examples of observance or transgression drawn from history and featuring such famous figures as Queen Elizabeth I, Henry Kissinger, Mao, Alfred Hitchcock, P.T. Barnum, Haile Selassie, Catherine the Great, and Socrates. Convincing, practical, sometimes shocking, this book will fascinate anyone interested in gaining, observing, or defending against ultimate control.

Hardy Green

The 48 Laws of Power seems to have been packaged more than published. . . . The moral advice adds up to a grim portrait of a ruthless, duplicitous universe. -- Business Week

Newsweek

This season's most talked about all-purpose personal strategy guide and philosophical compendium.

Publishers Weekly

Greene and Elffers have created an heir to Machiavelli's The Prince, espousing principles such as: everyone wants more power; emotions, including love, are detrimental; deceit and manipulation are life's paramount tools. Anyone striving for psychological health will be put off at the start, but the authors counter, saying "honesty is indeed a power strategy," and "genuinely innocent people may still be playing for power." Amoral or immoral, this compendium aims to guide those who embrace power as a ruthless game, and will entertain the rest. Elffers' layout (he is identified as the co-conceiver and designer in the press release) is stylish, with short epigrams set in red at the margins. Each law, with such elusive titles as "Pose as a Friend, Work as a Spy," "Get Others To Do the Work for You, But Always Take the Credit," "Conceal Your Intentions," is demonstrated in four ways--using it correctly, failing to use it, key aspects of the law and when not to use it. Illustrations are drawn from the courts of modern and ancient Europe, Africa and Asia, and devious strategies culled from well-known personae: Machiavelli, Talleyrand, Bismarck, Catherine the Great, Mao, Kissinger, Haile Selassie, Lola Montes and various con artists of our century. These historical escapades make enjoyable reading, yet by the book's conclusion, some protagonists have appeared too many times and seem drained. Although gentler souls will find this book frightening, those whose moral compass is oriented solely to power will have a perfect vade mecum.

Library Journal

Uses examples from history to deliver 48 laws for the power-hungry, e.g., Law 1: "Never outshine the master." Designed by Elffers, a noted book packager.

Library Journal

Uses examples from history to deliver 48 laws for the power-hungry, e.g., Law 1: "Never outshine the master." Designed by Elffers, a noted book packager.

Newsweek

This season's most talked about all-purpose personal strategy guide and philosophical compendium.

Kirkus Reviews

The authors have created a sort of anti-Book of Virtues in this encyclopedic compendium of the ways and means of power. Everyone wants power and everyone is in a constant duplicitous game to gain more power at the expense of others, according to Greene, a screenwriter and former editor at Esquire (Elffers, a book packager, designed the volume, with its attractive marginalia). We live today as courtiers once did in royal courts: we must appear civil while attempting to crush all those around us. This power game can be played well or poorly, and in these 48 laws culled from the history and wisdom of the world's greatest power players are the rules that must be followed to win. These laws boil down to being as ruthless, selfish, manipulative, and deceitful as possible. Each law, however, gets its own chapter: "Conceal Your Intentions," "Always Say Less Than Necessary," "Pose as a Friend, Work as a Spy," and so on. Each chapter is conveniently broken down into sections on what happened to those who transgressed or observed the particular law, the key elements in this law, and ways to defensively reverse this law when it's used against you. Quotations in the margins amplify the lesson being taught. While compelling in the way an auto accident might be, the book is simply nonsense. Rules often contradict one another. We are told, for instance, to "be conspicuous at all costs," then told to "behave like others." More seriously, Greene never really defines "power," and he merely asserts, rather than offers evidence for, the Hobbesian world of all against all in which he insists we live. The world may be like this at times, but often it isn't. To ask why this is so would be a farmore useful project. If the authors are serious, this is a silly, distasteful book. If they are not, it's a brilliant satire.



Table of Contents:
Preface
Law 1Never Outshine the Master1
Law 2Never Put too much Trust in Friends, Learn how to use Enemies8
Law 3Conceal your Intentions16
Law 4Always say Less than Necessary31
Law 5So much Depends on Reputation - Guard it with your Life37
Law 6Court Attention at all Cost44
Law 7Get others to do the Work for you, but always Take the Credit56
Law 8Make other People Come to you - use Bait if Necessary62
Law 9Win Through your Actions, Never through Argument69
Law 10Infection: Avoid the Unhappy and Unlucky76
Law 11Learn to Keep People Dependent on you82
Law 12Use Selective Honesty and Generosity to Disarm your Victim89
Law 13When Asking for Help, Appeal to People's Self-Interest, Never to their Mercy or Gratitude95
Law 14Pose as a Friend, Work as a Spy101
Law 15Crush your Enemy Totally107
Law 16Use Absence to Increase Respect and Honor115
Law 17Keep others in Suspended Terror: Cultivate an Air of Unpredictability123
Law 18Do not Build Fortresses to Protect yourself - Isolation is Dangerous130
Law 19Know who you're Dealing with - do not Offend the Wrong Person137
Law 20Do not Commit to Anyone145
Law 21Play a Sucker to Catch a Sucker - Seem Dumber than your Mark156
Law 22Use the Surrender Tactic: Transform Weakness into Power163
Law 23Concentrate your Forces171
Law 24Play the Perfect Courtier178
Law 25Re-Create yourself191
Law 26Keep your Hands Clean200
Law 27Play on People's need to Believe to Create a Cultlike Following215
Law 28Enter Action with Boldness227
Law 29Plan All the Way to the end236
Law 30Make your Accomplishments Seem Effortless245
Law 31Control the Options: Get others to Play with the Cards you Deal254
Law 32Play to People's Fantasies263
Law 33Discover Each Man's Thumbscrew271
Law 34Be Royal in your Own Fashion: Act Like a King to be Treated Like One282
Law 35Master the Art of Timing291
Law 36Disdain Things you cannot have: Ignoring them is the Best Revenge300
Law 37Create Compelling Spectacles309
Law 38Think as you Like but Behave Like others317
Law 39Stir up Waters to Catch Fish325
Law 40Despise the Free Lunch333
Law 41Avoid Stepping into a Great Man's Shoes347
Law 42Strike the Shepherd and the Sheep will Scatter358
Law 43Work on the Hearts and Minds of others367
Law 44Disarm and Infuriate with the Mirror Effect376
Law 45Preach the need for Change, but Never Reform too much at Once392
Law 46Never Appear too Perfect400
Law 47Do not Go Past the Mark you Aimed for; in Victory, Learn when to Stop410
Law 48Assume Formlessness419
Selected Bibliography431
Index433