Showing posts with label Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Management. Show all posts

3/18/2010

Review of Management (with InfoTrac Printed Access Card) (Hardcover)

In my opinion this is one of the best text books on management I read. I am using it extensively with undergraduate students for whom the English is a foreign language, and still they do not encounter any difficulties, either in understanding the text or the cases.
Arie Aviram Ph.D.



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3/10/2010

Review of The Radical Edge: Stoke Your Business, Amp Your Life, and Change the World (Hardcover)

Steve Farber has done it again. The Radical Edge takes off where the Radical Leap left off and it does take off. Filled with practical and depthful advice, The Radical Edge is a promise fulfilled. Farber has a way of presenting powerful ideas in a simple and straight forward fashion that speaks directly to making positive business and life choices, and he does so with a level of humor that makes this book a great read. Not only is the parable that drives this book well-thought out, but Farber's execution is excellent. This book and the earlier one may be focused on the business audience, but they provide wonderful and insightful advice for anyone who believes that living a successful life has more to do with who we are and how well we relate to others rather than how much stuff we can accumulate. Farber has really nailed what it takes to live "the good life." Now all we have to do is amp it up.



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2/07/2010

Review of Countdown (Hardcover)

I was looking for some insight into what I need to be doing with my personal finances, estate documents, etc.I read this book over a 3-hour flight and got off the plane with a completely different understanding of what I needed to be focused on.

The book teaches you that while you think you understand what you need to be doing from a financial planning perspective (and I was one of them), you really have a lot to learn.Everything seemed to be covered and I now know the next steps to get my financial life as in control as my business life.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to improve their understanding of personal financial planning and get that same peace of mind I was looking for.Great buy!



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1/25/2010

Review of The Upside of Turbulence: Seizing Opportunity in an Uncertain World (Hardcover)

How well we deal with changes in our business environment is the most important issue that companies face. The Upside of Turbulence is a very riveting book that captures the many times that innovation and agility have to carry a company through some of the hardest issues that a company can face. I could not put this book down; it was that interesting and that good. While companies struggle to compete, and people struggle to compete for jobs, sometimes it is the inexplicable moments where even though the idea is unpopular that carries the company through rough times.

There are sections of the book I do not agree with, but most of the book has enough examples to show why things worked when they worked. Companies are struggling now to work out how to manage in what promises to be a very long recovery, the Upside of Turbulence demonstrates how this is the one golden opportunity for companies that understand how to take advantage of downturns and changes in business environments to not only survive but take advantage of the moment. That is what makes this a very good book to read, we all know when things are going badly, but often we do not know how to take advantage of things going badly. The Upside of Turbulence shows how others have done this, and some of the ideas can be applied to issues happening today. We live in a boom bust economy, this is one of the few books that goes back far enough to show how to leverage the boom and the bust and turn it towards an advantage for everyone who is running a company.

Rated 5 of 5 stars, because I could not put this book down, ended up reading it all day, much to my chagrin.







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12/01/2009

Review of Management (Hardcover)

I recieved the product with in two days and was exactly what I ordered and in perfect condition (brand new).



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10/28/2009

Review of The Design of Business: Why Design Thinking is the Next Competitive Advantage (Hardcover)

I start by declaring my conflict.Roger martin is a friend.I sit on the RIM board with him.

Dr. Martin is Dean of the Rotman School of Business. One of his previous books was Opposable Minds: Winning Through Integrative Thinking. The theory of that book was that the ability to hold 2 opposing thoughts in mind often lead to a third superior view. The Design of Business has some of this "opposable" view thinking.


From The Design of Business book:

"What is Design Thinking Anyway?

Design thinking, as a concept, has been slowly evolving and coalescing over the past decade. One popular definition is that design thinking means thinking as as designer would, which is about as circular as a definition can be. More concretely, Tim Brown of IDEO has written that design thinking is "a discipline that uses the designer's sensibility and methods to match people's needs with what is technologically feasible and what a viable business strategy can convert into customer value and market opportunity." A person or organization instilled with that discipline is constantly seeking a fruitful balance between reliability and validity, between art and science, between intuition and analytics, and between exploration and exploitation. The design-thinking organization applies the designer's most crucial tool to the problems of business. That tool is abuctive reasoning."

Dr. Martin is a big advocate of strategy. I have found that good strategy in business can make successful business almost look easy. Of course you need good tacticians to execute but it is the strategy that takes a company to the next level.

Design of Business suggests that we do not use enough intuition in business. The book advocates using intuition combined with analytical thinking to devise strategy. (The opposable - intuition and analytics can co-exist to the better good)

My experience is that people are more comfortable with neat and tidy analytics but often the more messy intuitive strategy and design works better. Successful business is a bit messy.

Martin suggests that Design Thinking can be learned, fostered and developed which is indeed a hopeful thought.

I found the book interesting because it uses RIM as an example (among others) and I am close to that one so can see exactly where Martin is saying when he says Design Thinking yields competitive advantage.

Dr. Martin argues that time bias - short term thinking (often caused by the public markets) can kill good decision making. I heartily agree. Long term thinking is key.

Good book.



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