Most Recent Articles
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Blog / News & Opinion
Sales Surge!
By 800-CEO-READ
Jeffrey Gitomer and Noah Rickun will be LIVE in Milwaukee on June 10th at the Sales Surge Seminar! Here's what you'll hear: Building business momentum. .
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
Presentations in Action
By 800-CEO-READ
We all know a great presentation when we see it. With Jerry Weissman's new book, Presentations in Action, we get lessons from 80 great presentations about what makes them great. For those that have ever presented to a group, you're familiar with the myriad of issues one needs to address (and often realizes they missed once in front of the group - too late!
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / Excerpts
In the Smallest of Moments - An Excerpt From TouchPoints
By 800-CEO-READ
We get pitched to a lot—about books, ideas, authors, projects; from authors, publicists, agents and publishers. It is part of what we do here, and listening to all comers is part of how we weed through the massive amount of material that is published each year, find what we think are the best projects, make connections and stay successful. But it can get a little tiring at times, especially when you know someone isn't really thrilled about the project, idea or author they're pitching.
Categories: excerpts
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Blog / Staff Picks
Fixing the Game
Book Review by 800-CEO-READ
With the NFL owners and players union currently in court over the lockout, it might seem like an odd time to use the NFL as an example for how to run anything. But current labor disputes aside, the NFL is by far the most successful business operating in sport today—it must be doing something right. And Roger L.
Categories: staff-picks
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects – Obliquity
By 800-CEO-READ
Obliquity: Why Our Goals Are Best Achieved Indirectly by John Kay, Penguin Press, 240 pages, $25. 95, Hardcover, April 2011, ISBN 9781594202780 Obliquity. It’s a peculiar name for a book, and the title may in fact drive a number of potential readers (like me) to their dictionaries.
Categories: jack-covert-selects
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects – Decade of Change
By 800-CEO-READ
Decade of Change: Managing in Times of Uncertainty, edited by Geoffrey Brewer and Barb Sanford, Gallup Press, 240 pages, $24. 95, Hardcover, May 2011, ISBN 9781595620538 We’ve come to expect good things from Gallup Press, and their latest release, Decade of Change, doesn’t disappoint. Unlike their past releases, books like Strengths Finder 2.
Categories: jack-covert-selects
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects – Blue Collar, White Collar, No Collar
By 800-CEO-READ
Blue Collar, White Collar, No Collar: Stories of Work, edited by Richard Ford, Harper Perennial, 607 pages, $16. 99, Paperback, May 2011, ISBN 9780062020413 John Cheever, Andre Dubus, Donald Barthelme, Jhumpa Lahiri, Joyce Carol Oates, Eudora Welty, Tobias Wolff. These are names you expect to see on college literature course syllabi and New York Times Best Seller Lists.
Categories: jack-covert-selects
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Blog / News & Opinion
A Call For Submissions to the The FT/Goldman Sachs Book Awards
By 800-CEO-READ
The call is on for submissions to the 2011 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. From the press release: Now in its seventh year, the award is firmly established as a feature of the business and publishing calendars. [.
Categories: news-opinion, publishing-industry
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Blog / News & Opinion
ChangeThis: Issue 82
By 800-CEO-READ
Little Bets: Think Differently by Peter Sims “Our education system places great emphasis on teaching us about facts that are already known, such as historical information or scientific tables, and then testing us in order to measure how much we’ve retained about that body of knowledge. Those skills work perfectly well for many situations, but not when doing something new. Or creative.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / ChangeThis
Make It Happen: Turning Good Ideas Into Great Results
By Peter Sheahan
"The world is not short of ideas. It's not. It is short of people who can execute on them. It is short of people who know how to take their aspirations and make a real impact on the world with them. What differentiates the great ideas that end up on the cutting room floor from those that wind up changing the world? There are five steps, or rather five competencies you can build that separate the haves from the have-nots, the doers from the talkers ... They are not a mantra for meditation, they are not positive affirmations that you chant to yourself in the mirror, they are actions."
Categories: changethis