The Seven Essential Popular Business Book
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The Seven Essential Popular Business Books
By M.L. Jenson
Librarians Should Post This List as Required Reading for
Business Patrons.
1. "Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving
In," by Roger Fisher, William Ury and Bruce Patton. This is
the book that changed the face of negotiating, both business
and personal negotiating. It's compendium of well-tested
strategies for resolving any type of conflict. More important,
it encourages a negotiating mindset that enables both sides to
get what they need, if not everything they might want. Instead
of negotiation as conflict (which, in spite of lip service to
the contrary, is still the norm today), the negotiation
process can actually become the foundation of a mutually
beneficial ongoing relationship.
2. "The Art of War" by Tzu Sun. On the other side of the
coin, while business might not be war, the rich insights of
this 2,000 year-old classic are relevant to any situation in
which conflict might arise. That means any business situation,
no matter how win/win we might try to be.
3. "The One Minute Manager" by Kenneth Blanchard and
Spencer Johnson. "The One Minute Manager" is so simple it's
brilliant, a basic text for anyone who manages other human
beings, or anyone who simply manages themselves, or tries to.
With the longer and longer hours of the global economy, the
authors' take on balancing productivity against job (and life)
satisfaction is more pertinent today than it was when the book
was first conceived. This is a book to be read and re-read.
4. "Filling the Glass: The Skeptic's Guide to Positive
Thinking in Business" by Barry Maher. The fourth spot on the
list was first occupied by "The Power of Positive Thinking,"
followed by several recent "feel-good" bestsellers. Try
defending any of them to today's cynical managers and
entrepreneurs. "Filling the Glass," however, trades "let's
all think happy thoughts" for a hardheaded, reality-based
inspiration. With practical, effective strategies for getting
what you want in your career without sacrificing who you are,
it's so much the best of the breed that it's in a class by
itself.
5. "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing" by Jack Trout
and Al Ries. Even business people who have nothing to do
with marketing have something to do with marketing. Those
who don't understand the laws of marketing, no matter what
their position in the company, become an obstacle to those
who do. "The 22 Immutable Laws" succinctly explains the
rules of a game almost all of us are playing in one form or
another.
6. "Guerrilla Marketing" by Jay Conrad Levinson. From
the smallest Mom and Pop operation to the high tech
start-up to the largest Fortune 100 conglomerate, businesses
of every size and description can benefit from Levinson's
recently updated classic. For those of us not directly
involved in marketing, "Guerrilla Marketing" is even more
valuable for the inventive, entrepreneurial mindset it
engenders than its specific strategies and tactics. That's
why it's spawned a 30 book series, and enough blatant
imitations to overburden the most affluent library.
7. "What Color is Your Parachute?" by Richard Nelson
Bolles. Even if you're never planning to look for another
job, this is an essential addition to your library. Like a
parachute, it's there for you when all else fails, or for when
all else simply seems likely to fail. Whenever the thought
of changing jobs crosses the mind (as it always does at one
point or another), this parachute offers an invaluable
reality check, providing the tools necessary to properly
assess the situation. So you don't jump when the plane
isn't really going down. But so, when you do have to jump,
you're most likely to land safely back on solid ground.
>From "Today's Librarian," Copyright, M.L. Jenson, all rights
reserved.
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