Encouraging
our clients to read books has always been an integral part of our business. As a result, we’d like to periodically share 10 books that we feel should be
included in your business and/or personal library. These books are not listed in
order of sales, popularity, or recommendation. The numbers are used only for
reference purposes.
#1
Tom Peters Trilogy: The Reinventing
Work Series
The Brand
You 50
by Tom Peters
The White Collar Revolution is upon us, and 90% of jobs are in danger of major
reconfiguration — or extinction. This ground-breaking new series aims at
nothing less than a total re-invention of work (how we think about it,
undertake it, bring ourselves to it). The books are in the form of "50
lists" — The Brand You 50, The Project 50, and The Professional Service
Firm 50. Each contains 50 essential ideas for
making this revolution an opportunity for dramatic change in our own
working lives.
The Brand You 50
The fundamental unit in today’s economy is the individual, a.k.a.
YOU!
Someone who is savvy, informed, always learning and growing, who knows
how to sell himself/herself, and — most important — does work that matters!
This book lays it all out: from designing your business card to landing
jobs, from building your Rolodex to crafting an image, from transforming
your skill portfolio to delivering WOW! Results every time.
#2
Tom Peters Trilogy: The Reinventing
Work Series
The Project 50
by Tom Peters
Tasks are things of the past. To win today you must master the art of
The Project!
Technology has changed all the rules. Rigid hierarchies, departments,
and job descriptions are history. Today companies are fluid,
transformative, organized around temporary networks focused on the WOW!
Project... a superbly executed, high-impact piece of work with a
beginning, an end, a Client and specific deliverables, and an outcome you’ll
be bragging about 5 years from now!
#3
Tom Peters Trilogy: The Reinventing
Work Series
The Professional Service Firm 50
by Tom Peters
The economy is evolving at cyberspeed. The new game: leveraging
knowledge. And the new organizational model: the Professional Service
Firm!
These project-driven dynamos long ago mastered the art of doing work
that matters — and they have the profits and bragging right to prove it.
Learn how to generate urgency and excitement, partner with your clients
(and fire them if necessary), master information flow and timelines, and
deliver WOW! results... every time. This book is a millennial must!
#4
1001
Ways To Take Initiative At Work
by Bob Nelson
Here is the third in Nelson’s 1001
Ways Series. Whether you’re an entry-level assistant or a VP working
with the CEO, there’s only one person responsible for your career —
you. This unique motivational manual will help you realize your potential
for success. This book brings together hundreds of real-life examples,
advice from business leaders, and the author’s own techniques and
exercises to show readers how to draw on inner creativity, develop
self-leadership, set goals, take risks, and sell ideas. Learn how to take
action, question authority, think outside the box and trust your intuition
in this practical, timely book that will make an excellent addition to any
business library.
#5
FISH!
by
Stephen C. Lundin, Ph.D., Harry Paul, and John Christensen
Here’s another management parable in the spirit of
Raving Fans,
Gung Ho!, and
Who Moved My Cheese?
Fish! draws it’s lesson from an
unlikely source — the fun-loving fishmongers at Seattle’s Pike Place
Market. The authors have done a masterful job of capturing the essence of
how to infuse any workplace with high energy, positive attitudes, and a
passion for performance. This book is destined to become the authority on
how to change the workplace into a powerhouse of productivity, personal
satisfaction, and bottom-line performance. Fish! offers wisdom that
is easy to grasp, instantly applicable, and profound — the hallmarks of a
true business classic!
#6
The
Tipping Point
"How Little Things Can Make a Big
Difference"
by Malcolm Gladwell
Why did crime in New York drop so suddenly in the mid-90's? How
does an unknown novelist end up a best-selling author? Why is teenage
smoking out of control, when everyone knows smoking kills? What makes TV
shows like Sesame Street so good at teaching kids how to read? Why
did Paul Revere succeed with his famous warning?
In this brilliant and groundbreaking book, the author looks at why
major changes in our society so often happen sudden and unexpectedly.
Ideas, behavior, messages, and products, he argues, often spread like
outbreaks of infectious disease. Just as a single sick person can start an
epidemic of the flu, so too can a few fare-beaters and graffiti artists
fuel a subway crime wave, or a satisfied customer fill the empty tables of
a new restaurant. These are social epidemics, and the moment when they
take off, when they reach their critical mass, is the Tipping Point. This
book is written with an infectious enthusiasm for the power and joy of new
ideas. Most of all, it is a road map to change, with a profoundly hopeful
message — that one imaginative person applying a well-placed lever can
move the world!
#7
Love
'Em
Or Lose 'Em
Getting Good People to Stay
by Beverly Kaye and Sharon Jordan-Evans
The retention of talent has been identified by numerous resources as
the #1 business issue of the 21st Century. There is no issue
with greater urgency, or with more far-reaching consequences, than the
issue of retention. The authors have done Corporate America a great favor
by focusing a laser beam on the subject. They have skillfully blended wit,
humor, charm, research and common sense to grab the reader’s attention
and inspire action. This book provides easy to implement answers for
everything you always wanted to know about retention, but were afraid to
ask.
So how do you keep talented people? How do you get them to stay
while others try to entice them away? Read the 26 strategies in this book
and you will know what to do!
#8
The
Knowing-Doing Gap
How Smart Companies Turn Knowledge Into
Action
by Jeffrey
Pfeffer and Robert I. Sutton
The market for business knowledge is booming, as companies looking to
improve their performance pour billions of dollars into training programs,
consultants, and executive education searching for ways to improve. Did
you ever wonder why so much education and training, management
consultation, organizational research and so many books and articles
produce so few changes in actual management practice? The authors
wondered, too, and so they embarked on a quest to explore one of the great
mysteries in organizational management: why knowledge of what needs to be
done frequently fails to result in action or behavior consistent with that
knowledge. The authors describe the most common obstacles to action — such
as fear and inertia — and profile successful companies that overcome them.
The book, based on four years of research, is broken into chapters with
titles such as "When Talk Substitutes for Action," "When
Fear Prevents Acting on Knowledge," "When Internal Competition
Turns Friends into Enemies," and "Turning Knowledge into
Action." Each chapter contains tips on what to do and what to avoid,
and provides examples of how a lethargic company culture can be
transformed. The Knowing-Doing Gap is a useful how-to guide for
managers looking to make changes. Yet, as the authors point out, it takes
more than reading their book or discussing their recommendations. It takes
action.
#9
Leadership
A to Z
A Guide for the Appropriately Ambitious
by James O'Toole
Instead of focusing, as most leadership tomes do, on who leaders are,
their character, style, charisma, and so on, this book looks closely at
what great leaders actually do. As the title implies, Leadership A to Z is
organized alphabetically by topic, from Apologia to Zenith, in bite-sized
chunks of two to four pages that are meant to be pondered between meetings
or while waiting for a plane. However, the author crams a lot of great
information in here, drawing on examples from Gandhi to Abraham Lincoln to
Roger Enrico of PepsiCO to pro basketball coach Pat Riley.
A leadership coach in a book, this essential reference guide features
over 90 lessons covering an alphabet of leadership topics. Author James
O'Toole, a 30 year veteran of leadership coaching, gives specific how-to's
drawn from great leaders' success stories and challenges. Leadership A to
Z challenges readers to learn what leaders do on a case-by-case basis, and
to incorporate their styles into their own day-to-day leadership
practices.
#10
If You Want
to Make God Really Laugh,
Show Him Your Business Plan
The 101 Universal Laws of Business
by Barry J. Gibbons
The former CEO of Burger King blows the cover on corporate
incompetence — and uncovers the secrets of good business — in his
sharp-tongued, riotously funny book.
Why are so many businesses such depressing, poorly directed messes? Ask
Barry Gibbons, enlightened capitalist, high-spirited wit, and the man who
nearly single-handedly pulled Burger King out of a long, disparaging
slump, rendering it robust and dynamic (without cutting heads).
In this rollicking, easy-to-read book, Gibbons blasts apart the thick
wall of arrogance, hierarchy, regimentation, and exaggerated complexity so
often contributed to the corporate world — and lays bare his 101
"Universal Laws of Business," commonsense truths about how to
run a business profitably and well. His sage witticisms and sensible
opinions cover motivational theory, limited terms for business leaders,
being big but acting small, hurdling marketplace barriers, unhealthy
profit, new branding, innovation, information technology, and more.
And Gibbons deftly answers nagging questions, such as: why mediocre
products litter a hyper-competitive marketplace that demands distinct
ones, why the workforce is supremely alienated, exactly at a time when
businesses need savvy, motivated employees and why the most meticulously
crafted business plan contains the one and only scenario guaranteed not to
happen.
These 101 business truths will grab readers by the gut and make them
gasp in relief. Because they're the things that most everyone (especially
the folks laboring in the trenches) knows to be true — and wonders why the
top dogs don't have a clue.