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Thursday, February 28, 2013

9 Business Books that will change your life.

            Today I ran into Dave Kerpen's article on LinkedIn. I found it interesting because depending on who you talk to, they will give you a different list of books that they think will change your life. Now, I'm not saying that they're not good books. I'm just saying that just because it worked for someone it might not do motivational wonders for others because everyone is different. I've decided to copy and paste the original article below as well as the original link because I'm not sure if people that don't have LinkedIn accounts would be able to access the information.

            Out of these nine books, I've actually only read one # 3 The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcolm Gladwell. This was book was required for my management class in college. I  I am definitely in getting through this reading list and being able to give a first hand review. Until then, please feel free to read them and give me your feedback on how how life changing these books are. 



Great leaders learn every day, and reading great books is the one of the best ways to learn. I've been fortunate enough to read some excellent books over the last fifteen years - books that have inspired me to change the way I see the world, my business, and the opportunities in front of me. In the order in which I've read them, here is a list of nine books which have changed my life. May they change yours as well:
I read this book when I was 21 years old and didn't know what to do with the rest of my life. It helped me go from a Crunch n Munch vendor at the ballpark to a top salesperson at Radio Disney. Ffifteen years later, I have given at least 40 copies away to interns, staff and friends who are searching for their career purpose. It's difficult work - because not only will you read the book, but you'll have to do a lot of exercises and soul searching throughout - but whether you're 21 or 61, you'll emerge with a clearer vision of what you want to do next and where you'll want to work.
No author has influenced me more as a marketer, business person and writer than Seth Godin. I could have easily included 9 books just by Godin - Purple CowTribesLinchpin, Poke the Box & his latest, Icarus Deception are all amongst my favorites. But Permission Marketing described social media marketing before it existed. Seth understood push-vs-pull marketing long before others, and this book, published in 1999, is still a must read for anyone in marketing today.
This classic, one of three by Gladwell (Blink & Outliers are the others), demonstrates how successful products are launched, how ideas spread and how a trend can take off. It's influenced me a great deal, as a word of mouth and social media marketer. And it's an essential read, whether you're in marketing or sales, or just want to become better at getting your ideas to spread.
Collins is scientist of great companies - and this is his best work - chock full of case studies and simple yet profound principles like Level 5 Leadership. Even though I read this book when my company was only a handful of employees, it inspired me to want to build something great, and enduring. Whether you work at a large company that has the potential itself to become great and enduring, or you have a vision of a company you'd like to one day build, this is a must-read.
It's hard to believe I even had a business before I read this book by the founder of my favorite business group, Entrepreneurs Organization. Verne's 1-page strategic plan is now used by both companies I've founded, and thousands of other companies. And our management teams use much of the methodology from this book. What's great is that it's both inspirational and quite practical - an excellent read for any entrepreneur or manager at a small business.
This is a must read for any small business owner - especially "technical" owners such as lawyers, accountants, florists, restaurateurs, consultants and dentists. Gerber inspires the small business owner to get out of his/her own way, and to build systems and processes that scale and allow the business owner to work "on" the business and not "in" the business.
Make no mistake - if you are an owner or leader at a business - this is a great, super valuable read, even if you or your owners have no intention or ever selling the business. The idea isn't to create a business in order to sell it - it's to create a business that has sustaining value beyond you and without you. Warrilow's book is a short, easy story - with powerful, unforgettable lessons - so much so, that after my business partner and I read it, we gave copies to the entire Likeable team to read.
8) Rework by Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson
No matter what you do, this easy read will change the way you think about your work. It is so simply written, with small words and big pictures - and yet contains profound wisdom about how to be more productive and successful without being a workaholic or sacrificing anything. I read it in an hour on a plane, and have since shared it with two dozen colleagues, and referred back to it myself at least a dozen times.
Along with Seth Godin, Patrick Lencioni is my favorite business author. I've read and love The Advantage, Getting Naked, The Five Dysfunctions of a Team, and The Five Tempations of a CEO. But the reason I've selected this one as my favorite, is that, as I've written before here, our ultimate legacy isn't our career, but our family. In this book, Lencioni applies his management consulting methodology and brilliant storytelling ability to the running of a family. It's amazing how little strategy most of us parents apply to the most important organization we've got, our families, and this book helps change all that. Six months after my wife and I read this book, I'm proud to report that our family now has a strategic plan, complete with a mission statement, quarterly objectives, and weekly 10-minute meetings. And it's going GREAT.
Those are my nine favorites- though I've read dozens more I've loved. I've also written a couple of books that I hope have changed a few lives - Likeable Social Media, about the role of social media in today's society and how organizations can best leverage it, and, recently, Likeable Business, about how to leverage 11 simple principles of customer-centric, staff-centric leadership to succeed in today's social-business world.
Now, I'd love to know YOUR favorites. Which of these books have you read? What other business books have changed YOUR lives? What books have inspired YOU to become a better business person, leader and human being? Let me know in the comments here - and happy reading!


http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130211165231-15077789-9-business-books-that-will-change-your-life?trk=mp-details-rc

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Time

Lately, it seems like the thing that I lack the most is time. Yet, I seem to be very active in a lot of the major social networks i.e. LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram, on top of dealing with a very active one year-old. For the most part I like to use my social networks to stay "updated" and I say updated in quotation marks because there's only so much information that one can absorb in a day without getting lost in it, and babies have a tendency to not like that.

So here's the thing, how do working parent's stay well connected? I have seen far too many people have children and suddenly fall behind on current events or the latest technology. Therefore, I have decided to start posting here links to some of the articles that grab my attention. Not only will this force me to downsize the number of articles that I just collect in my Pocket app. but it will give me sometime to digest said information. I will try my best not to stray away from this blog and will now and then post new information about the local tech scene here in Missoula, MT.