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You Pick, I Review

January 9th, 2008 @ 7:11 am

7 Comments

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: Entrepreneur, Entrepreneurship, Venture Capital, Biotechnology, Management, Finance, Financing Startups, Michael Fitzgerald

Harvard Business School Press sent me its Spring 2008 catalog. Tell me what you’d like to see reviewed.

Books on the way include:

Billions of Entrepreneurs: How China and India Are Reshaping Their Futures — and Yours, by Tarun Khanna

UPDATE: UPDATE: See the Big Think Breakdown here: China and India Don’t Need Us.

Private Equity Lessons You Cannot Afford to Ignore, by Orit Gadiesh and Hugh MacArthur

Creative Capital: Georges Doriot and The Birth of Venture Capital, by Spencer E. Ante

5 Future Strategies You Need Right Now, by George Stalk

The Power of Unreasonable People: How Social Entrepreneurs Create Markets that Change the World, By John Elkington and Pamela Hartigan

Manage the Media: Don’t Let the Media Manage You, by William J. Holstein

Science Lessons: What The Business of Biotech Taught Me About Management, by Amgen founder Gordon Binder

Followership: How Followers Are Creating Change and Changing Leaders, by Barbara Kellerman

Crucibles of Leadership: How to learn from experience to become a Great Leader, by Robert J. Thomas

Becoming A Resonant Leader, by Annie McKee, Richard E. Boyatzis, and Fran Johnston

Innovation to the Core: A BluePrint for Transforming the Way Your Company Innovates, by Peter Skarzynski and Rowan Gibson

Talent on Demand: Managing Talent in an Age of Uncertainty, by Peter Cappelli

Retire Retirement: Career Strategies for the BOomer Generation, by Tamara Erickson

Predictable Surprises: The Disasters You Should Have Seen Coming, and how to prevent them, by Max H. Bazerman and Michael Watkins

Rocking the Boat: How to Inspire Change from Within Your Organization, by Debra E. Meyerson

Know of a good business read you'd like to share with your fellow BNET readers?

 
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  •  
    1

    Michael Fitzgerald

    01/09/08 | Report as spam

    my picks

    I'm interested in:

    Creative Capital
    The Power of Unreasonable People
    Followership
    Becoming a Resonant Leader
    Talent on Demand
    Rocking that Boat

    Michael Fitzgerald

  •  
    2

    GenghisKhan24

    01/09/08 | Report as spam

    RE: You pick, I review

    The three that jumped out at me:


    1) The Khanna book on India/China
    2) Cappelli on talent
    3) "Predictable Surprises"

  •  
    3

    cstainton@...

    01/09/08 | Report as spam

    RE: You pick, I review

    The Power of Unreasonable People
    Predictable Surprises

    Thank you

  •  
    4

    An Expat in France

    01/11/08 | Report as spam

    "Rocking the Boat" please.

    I'd love to read your review of "Rocking the Boat." In my opinion, it's the only book worth keeping on the list. Please let us know what you think of it.

    Leadership...? Innovation...? Snore.......

    I'll save you several hundred pages of reading on Leadership:

    Leaders have an authehticity that can't be "taught;" You don't have to be a good leader to be an effective manager, but if you have to read a book on how to be a leader, you'll never be one. The foundations of true leadership can be found in how the individual lives his/her life, and isn't something that is switched on or off depending one whether one is in the office or at home. Leaders aren't necessarily motivational speakers; leaders influence. That means saying and/or doing the "right" thing... expressing the "right" sentiment... at the right time. That's how you influence people, and that's what leaders do.

    ...nuff said.


    RE: Innovation:

    "Innovation" has become an over-exposed buzzword for marketers and CXO speech writers who want to sound like their company is on the leading edge. There's so much static around both of this topics that any "new" material is suspect at best. While there are ways to foster cultures of "innovation" in the workplace, the biggest challenge lies not in generating new ideas, but in getting people to accept, embrace and develop those ideas. That makes Change Management a more relevant topic in my mind.

    End of song.

  •  
    5

    Michael Fitzgerald

    01/17/08 | Report as spam

    Re:

    I do like a skeptic! Spoken like someone who has seen a few too many books that promise epiphanies.

    I think leadership books have their value in exposing people to different styles of leading. Such books can also spark people to adapt their behavior. Sure, there's instinctive, rise-to-the-occasion leadership, but there are other contexts for leadership. I've talked to few leaders that didn't learn something about leadership either from someone else or from something they read.

    As for innovation, again, I know a lot of it is pablum. And the word is mushy, and all too often innovation is just another word for tweaking. I'm not sure I don't think you're using change management as a synonym for innovation, though.

    thanks for the great comment.

    Michael

  •  
    6

    elliottng

    01/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: You pick, I review

    I'll take Billions of Entrepreneurs for "one million dollars" . A quick rant: why is the Bnet registration so onerous? this is clearly a print publication approach toward building online community and followership. If I didn't personally know this blog author and the quality of his writing and thinking, I would not bother to even participate in this discussion. I comment on a lot of blogs and don't see why I should fill out a huge subscriber information card with all the preferences and also why I was opted in to ANY newsletters...I immediately opted out of them. I'm sure the content is great, just don't force me to take it all right now. Sorry for the rant but someone at Bnet needs to hear this from the viewer base. And there is no better way to do that than to have a "naked conversation" about it out in comments. happy Thanks for listening, and thanks for the invitation to have you review a book!

  •  
    7

    Michael Fitzgerald

    01/30/08 | Report as spam

    The trouble with registering for bnet

    Hi Elliott,

    Thanks for your pick, and your patience. You are not the only person who has complained to me about the registration process. I have alerted one of the powers that be, and I hope they'll be responsive.

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