Your Brand, LLC Forums  

Go Back   Your Brand, LLC Forums > BUSINESS & CAREER FORUMS - General Business Topics > What is on your mind, thinker?

What is on your mind, thinker? Open discussion - inspiration, chit chat, news, politics, economy, suggestions and RSS feeds from Thinkers...

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 06-01-2008, 05:33 PM
David Sandusky's Avatar
Advisor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Denver
Posts: 1,598
Blog Entries: 5
Send a message via Skype™ to David Sandusky
Default Seth Godin RSS feed: How to read a business book

My RSS Feed is a Thinker and Has Just Posted the Following:

I like reading magic books.

I don’t do magic. Not often (and not well). But reading the books is fun. It’s a vicarious thing, imagining how a trick might work, visualizing the effect and then smiling at how the technique is done. One after another, it’s a pleasant adventure.

A lot of people read business books in just the same way. They cruise through the case studies or the insights or examples and imagine what it would be like to be that brilliant entrepreneur or that successful CEO or that great sales rep. A pleasant adventure.

There’s a huge gap between most how-to books (cookbooks, gardening, magic, etc.) and business books, though. The gap is motivation. Gardening books don’t push you to actually do something. Cookbooks don’t spend a lot of time trying to sell you on why making a roast chicken isn’t as risky as you might think.

The stakes are a lot higher when it comes to business.

Wreck a roast chicken and it’s $12 down the drain. Wreck a product launch and there goes your career...

I’m passionate about writing business books precisely for this reason. There are more business books sold than most other non-fiction categories for the same reason. High stakes, high rewards.

The fascinating thing is this: I spend 95% of my time persuading people to take action and just 5% of the time on the recipes.

The recipe that makes up just about any business book can be condensed to just two or three pages. The rest is the sell. The proof. The persuasion.

Which leads to your role as the reader. How to read a business book... it’s not as obvious as it seems.
  • Bullet points are not the point.
If you’re reading for the recipe, and just the recipe, you can get through a business book in just a few minutes. But most people who do that get very little out of the experience. Take a look at the widely divergent reviews for The Dip. The people who ‘got it’ understood that it was a book about getting you to change your perspective and thus your behavior. Those that didn’t were looking for bullet points. They wasted their money.

Computer books, of course, are nothing but bullet points. Programmers get amazing value because for $30 they are presented with everything they need to program a certain tool. Yet most programmers are not world class, precisely because the bullet points aren’t enough to get them to see things the way the author does, and not enough to get them motivated enough to actually program great code.

So, how to read a business book:

1. Decide, before you start, that you’re going to change three things about what you do all day at work. Then, as you’re reading, find the three things and do it. The goal of the reading, then, isn’t to persuade you to change, it’s to help you choose what to change.

2. If you’re going to invest a valuable asset (like time), go ahead and make it productive. Use a postit or two, or some index cards or a highlighter. Not to write down stuff so you can forget it later, but to create marching orders. It’s simple: if three weeks go by and you haven’t taken action on what you’ve written down, you wasted your time.

3. It’s not about you, it’s about the next person. The single best use of a business book is to help someone else. Sharing what you read, handing the book to a person who needs it... pushing those around you to get in sync and to take action--that’s the main reason it’s a book, not a video or a seminar. A book is a souvenir and a container and a motivator and an easily leveraged tool. Hoarding books makes them worth less, not more.

Effective managers hand books to their team. Not so they can be reminded of high school, but so that next week she can say to them, "are we there yet?"




click here to read more from and support Seth's Blog
__________________
David Sandusky

like an ad agency, but for people w/ the Strategic Career Plan and Personal Board of Advisors

LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | call 303.325.3225
"The greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it" - Michelangelo
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Seth Godin RSS feed: Recognition David Sandusky What is on your mind, thinker? 0 06-01-2008 05:33 PM
Seth Godin RSS feed: Tide needs your help! David Sandusky What is on your mind, thinker? 0 06-01-2008 05:33 PM
Seth Godin RSS feed: Let's put on a show David Sandusky What is on your mind, thinker? 0 06-01-2008 05:33 PM
Seth Godin RSS feed: The spirit of the game David Sandusky What is on your mind, thinker? 0 06-01-2008 05:33 PM
Seth Godin RSS feed: A chance to be on the cover of my new book David Sandusky What is on your mind, thinker? 0 06-01-2008 05:33 PM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 01:13 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.1.0