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Saturday, August 28, 2010

Rich Dad's Increase Your Financial IQ: Get Smarter with Your Money by Robert Kiyosaki

Paperback: 197 pages
Publisher: Business Plus (March 26, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0446509361
ISBN-13: 978-0446509367

Sunday, August 15, 2010

A Diary of Private Prayer by John Baillie

A Diary of Private Prayer by John Baillie (Paperback - Jul 16, 1996)



  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Fireside; 1st Fireside Ed edition (July 16, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684824981
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684824987


Product Description

In this book of personal devotions, Dr. Baillie inspires a deep searching of one's inner life through prayer by writing each prayer so that it seems to have been written specifically for the reader. In his understanding of the aspects of God's relation to man and man's relation to God through prayer, Dr. Baillie intermingles adoration, meditation, and intercession with a strong sense of the importance of social needs, as well as the needs of the individual.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Growing a Business by Paul Hawken

Paperback: 256 pagesPublisher: Simon & Schuster; First Edition edition (October 15, 1988)Language: EnglishISBN-10: 0671671642ISBN-13: 978-0671671648





Growing a Business by Paul Hawken  (Paperback - Oct 15, 1988)

Key Points

  • “For the new and growing business, too much money is a greater problem than too little”.
  • The purpose of business is not to take risks but rather to get something done.
  • “With low overhead, frugal means, and fragile budgets, you can’t buy your way out of problems. You have to learn your way out.”

Summary

The best businesses are those that do not focus on merely earning money, but those that have a broader vision. They are not formed by people asking themselves what to do, but by someone who is already deeply involved in some job or hobby, and who can apply that knowledge and passion to their business.
Most businesses are not spectacular successes or failures, but your first will without doubt be a learning experience. Start your business at the beginning - not the business plan or paperwork or an office, but your idea, reduced to its core essence. You have to know the intimate details of how everything runs, or you won’t be able to delegate those tasks later. Entrepreneurs are risk avoiders - they seek opportunity, not risk, but stepping into the unknown is always unnerving, for any entrepreneur. Loneliness is part of the territory, and many people won’t understand what you’re going through. Going into business is a test of your character, because business is about people, and people are liable to the unexpected. You must also be “playful” as an entrepreneur - when things aren’t going right, “play” with the product or the idea - transform it, innovate, change it. Practice makes perfect, and a lot of practice is necessary in business to be as good as you possibly can. Being constrained by too little money is better than having too much. Small companies are best at solving problems that cannot simply be made to go away by throwing money at them.
“If money could solve problems, there would be no small businesses because the big businesses with plenty of money would run everything”.
A smaller business is easier to manage - many executives of huge firms are “along for the ride” in that no one person can really have a handle on that vast an organization.
Problems are, of course, are part and parcel of any business - a constant. Often they are also a source of opportunities if you can creatively overcome them. “A good business has interesting problems”.

Small is good

Smaller firms are better suited to deal with many problems in today’s post-industrial economy, where raw scale is the brawn behind a company’s success. Smaller companies are more nimble in their ability to respond to changing demand, new niches, and desires of their customers. Size is no longer an advantage for many companies - mass markets and mass production mean that no one is entirely satisfied, whereas a smaller firm can tailor its products more specifically to its clients. “Meaningful change almost always comes from the edge, the margins”. Smaller companies are often better interacting with “customers”, rather than “consumers” - because they are better at providing quality and service before, and after a purchase.

Business ideas

The best ideas for businesses are things that are already interwoven with your life, things you are passionate about and have a deep understanding of. Good businesses often start with people wanting to be able to buy something that they can’t find, and thus end up in business making it themselves. Don’t start more than one business - do one thing and do it well. Several thought processes that might work for generating ideas include: recreating something that has been lost - a business that is no longer done with the quality it once had, taking something ordinary and doing it really well. Look for a business that can be separated into its components - for example cookware can be sold in a specialized shop instead of in a department store. Be the most complete at what you do - the one people go to for the details. Aim to be the lowest cost provider by being attentive when buying from suppliers. Lastly, make the whole experience fun for people.

Build incrementally

A business plan can be helpful to articulate your business in order to have a broad idea of the nature of your business, and if you so choose, attempt to secure investments. A good plan will be specific regarding how you plan to bring your product to market, and its analysis of the competition. A business plan forces you to think in depth about your business. Be honest in your planning. “Enterprises fail more often because of the sum total of seemingly inconsequential events acting upon them than because of a sudden disaster or discontinuity” - so make learning a part of your plan. Create a plan that allows for some failure, rather than one where everything must go perfectly in order to succeed. Initially, survival is more important than success. Healthy growth is growth done on your own terms, rather than forced. Take enough time to do it right, but no more, and no less. Try and create a business that will last one hundred years or longer - plan for the long run. Plan for success, because by the time you succeed, you might not have time to make plans. Write your business plan as if it were going to be read by a good friend who you wanted to convey your ideas and situation to, rather than selling it to a stranger. A good business plan contains these elements:
  • Executive summary.
  • Discussion of the nature of the business.
  • Description of the product or service. Be brief.
  • Marketing plan.
  • Competitive analysis.
  • Description of management.
  • Financial projections.

Business types

  • The sole proprietorship is the simplest, easiest way to be in business. There are no legal fees, board of directors, stock, and your income taxes are simply your own income taxes. This can be a limiting form of business if you ever plan to grow, however. Furthermore, the biggest problem is that you are personally liable for the business - you could lose everything.
  • Partnerships are often problematic and do not offer limited liability.
  • A corporation is the best way to structure a business.
You will need a partner, and to be a real partner, this person should be there from the beginning. Of course, they have to be the right partner as well. Include your employees as owners of the company. It’s simpler, easier, and more pleasant for everyone to get people involved 100% in the company and its success. Make sure that, if needs be, the partners and owners can leave the business without killing it. The best form of organization for the company is one where you would work best as an employee.

Money

Money is a difficult subject to talk about for most people. Money doesn’t create anything, but flows to where there are ideas and initiative. Start your business with the amount of money you feel comfortable dealing with. It is better to start slow and steady rather than get in over your head and feel nervous about the money involved. “With low overhead, frugal means, and fragile budgets, you can’t buy your way out of problems. You have to learn your way out.” Obtain financing before you need it - this will leave you in a better bargaining position. Do not borrow too much money, and never borrow money from friends that you can’t repay personally. If you think you need to grow a business a lot in a short period of time, bootstrapping probably wont’ work - you will need investments, and likely lose money initially, and if things go well, after some initial period of losses, come out ahead. Banks are generally a very poor way of financing your business, because they probably won’t loan you money. Smith and Hawken successfully sold some stock directly to the public, which isn’t easy to do, but can be managed by keeping investors informed, making sure their investments are liquid, and avoiding surprises.

“Tradeskill”

Businesses don’t require intelligence, per se, to run, but “tradeskill” - the “knack of understanding what people want, how much they’ll pay, and how they make their decision”. This is most likely a skill that’s easiest to acquire at a young age, and more difficult as you get older. It’s most often encountered in people who are very sensitive to the market. It can’t be learned from a book or an MBA program. Most people know whether they have this ability or not, and should plan accordingly.
Persistence is, of course, fundamental, but is different from being bull-headed or aggressive. You must also be able to face the facts - observing the world in a “detached, pragmatic way”. Minimizing risks is important to an entrepreneur. Keep track of them, and work to eliminate or isolate yourself from them. Be wary of any strategy that has no redundancy or backup.
Be a hands-on learner, and get involved with all aspects of your business, so that you know exactly how they work down to the details.
You must know the numbers of your business, and familiarize yourself with basic accounting, because this is what tells you whether things are working or not. The relationship between money coming in, and money going out is critical. You should know by heart how much money comes in daily, weekly and monthly, how much goes out, and how much you are owed, and your cash balance. Beyond money numbers, also measure and learn numbers that are important to your business, such as customer support calls.

Sales

Selling is something the customer lets you do, and to best do so, a reputation for honesty and integrity is important, and must be genuine. You must have the market’s “permission” to sell. Market products that you would want, since you can’t always know what other people want. Don’t fake “bigness” - because if people want “big”, you simply won’t be able to deliver. Honesty can be far more effective than hype. Honesty delivers a better “signal to noise ratio”.

Treating your customers right

“The customer is always right” is a fine thing to say, but your business is you, and it’s up to you to live those words, or they will not be part of your firm’s culture. Many firms are geared up to deal with fraud, waste, hassles and scams, but many have consequently become terrible at providing good service. This is, however, a great opportunity for your business. To build a culture of service and helpfullness towards your customers, you must hire people who have those qualities to begin with. Give them the authority to make calls in favor of the customer, and say “to heck with the company”. In the end, it pays for itself in customer loyalty and a stellar reputation.
Some guidelines for customer service:
  • Customers want a long term relationship.
  • Give your employees the right to make things right for your customer.
  • A job isn’t done until it’s checked.
  • Having one person follow the entire life cycle of a customer’s request is less efficient, but more rewarding.
  • Use mistakes as an opportunity to improve.
How to be a good customer:
  • If you don’t raise your voice when something’s not right, no one will. Make yourself heard.
  • Don’t forget a bit of praise when you are pleased with the product/service.
  • Be articulate in your requests.
  • Demand speedy service.
  • If something isn’t right, act immediately - don’t wait for a month.
  • Be kind to the person on the other end of the phone.
  • Keep after it and don’t be afraid to pursue the problem higher up in the company.

Working with people

You must treat your people well for your business to succeed. This shouldn’t be a weight, a responsibility, but rather an agreeable and rewarding part of your business. People need to be treated like people, rather than dilbert-esque cogs in a machine. “Firing is failure”, and the simplest way to look at it is that everyone took part in the failure - if you hire well in the first place, it’s far easier to avoid firing. Hire people as individuals, rather than as a specific role. The best people are adaptable enough that they will likely enjoy a challenge of performing a new job, and will do it better than someone with more experience but no enthusiasm left. Hire people you admire, respect, and look up to, and never hire anyone you look down on or feel superior to. Giving people responsibility makes them feel more enthusiastic and more involved. When growing, it’s important to only grow as fast as your employees can, otherwise you will overwhelm them, and the business will suffer. Try and be as open as you can, and communicate with your employees - ask their opinions, and listen to the answers. They are the ones closest to emerging problems, and are the most likely to be able to spot them in time. One idea that has proved effective is the 5-15 report, a very brief weekly report discussing the weeks activities, the employee’s morale, and an idea each week to improve the company in some way. It is important to avoid people becomming territorial about their information. By staying lean, even slightly understaffed, people depend on each other more, and are less likely to be “political” about their role in the company. And remember that people will immitate the boss - if you’re open and share information and ideas, everyone else will as well.

Links


    Review

    San Francisco Chronicle Growing a Business is highly readable....Its ideas on doing business deserve widespread circulation, discussion and recognition. -- Review

    Product Description

    Nearly everyone harbors a secret dream of starting or owning a business. In fact, 1,000,000 businesses start in the United States every year. Many of them fail, but enough succeed so that small businesses are now adding millions of jobs to the economy at the same time that the Fortune 500 companies are actually losing jobs.


    Paul Hawken -- entrepreneur and best-selling author -- wrote Growing a Business for those who set out to make their dream a reality. He knows what he's talking about; he is his own best example of success. In the early 1970s, while he was still in his twenties, he founded Erewhon, the largest distributor of natural foods. More recently, he founded and still runs Smith & Hawken, the premier mail-order garden tool company. And he wrote a critically acclaimed book called The Next Economy about the future of the economy.


    Using examples like Patagonia, Ben & Jerry's Homemade Ice Cream, and University National Bank of Palo Alto, California, Hawken shows that the successful business is an expression of an individual person. The most successful business, your idea for a business, will grow from something that is deep within you, something that can't be stolen by anyone because it is so uniquely yours that anyone else who tried to execute your idea would fail. He dispels the myth of the risk-taking entrepreneur. The purpose of business, he points out, is not to take risks but rather to get something done.

    Sunday, August 1, 2010

    2010 Review of Books - July

    During this month, it was probably one of the busiest time of my business schedule as it passed the half yearly mark.  


    This month music video is a continuation in the compilation of great composers of the Western Classical Masterpieces. 




    The books that inspired me to carry on for this month are: -
    Number 4: Singapore Sun Tzu In Perspective by KHOO Keng Hor




    About the Author
    Khoo Kheng-Hor (Chinese: 邱庆河; pinyin: Qiu Qinghe; born 2 March 1956) is a Malaysian author and speaker on contemporary application of the 500 BC Chinese military treatise, The Art of War, by renowned military strategist Sun Tzu. In the 1990s, Khoo was the first Sun Tzu student in South-east Asia to link and teach the general's principles in relation to business and management.

    To date, Khoo has written over 26 business and management books, most of which are based on Sun Tzu's Art of War as he made it his life's mission to "suntzunize" as many people as possible. In 1997, although a Malaysian citizen, he was appointed as honorary Assistant Superintendent of Police by the Singapore Police Force in recognition for his contribution as consultant-trainer to the police force of Singapore. His first novel, Taikor, was nominated by the National Library of Malaysia for the 2006 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. Since 1999, Khoo has gone into retirement and occasionally travels in Malaysia and Singapore to share the wisdom of Sun Tzu's strategies for success and happiness upon requests from his readers and supporters.

    His website are: http://www.khookhenghor.com

    Number 3:  The On-Time, On-Target Manager: How a "Last-Minute Manager" Conquered Procrastination by Ken Blanchard and Steve Gottry






    Ken Blanchard joined with noted business author Steve Gottry to explore one of the most common and insidious problems plaguing the workplace -- procrastination.


    The On-Time, On-Target Manager is the story of Bob, a typical middle manager who puts things off to the last minute. As a result, he misses deadlines because his lack of focus causes him to accomplish meaningless tasks before getting to the important things. Like many professionals, Bob rationalizes, justifies, and tries to explain. Luckily, Bob is sent to his company's CEO -- which stands for "Chief Effectiveness Officer" -- who helps him deal with the three negative side effects of procrastination: lateness, poor work quality, and stress to himself and others. Bob learns how to transform himself from a crisis-prone Last-Minute manager into a productive On-Time, On-Target manager.





    With this engaging parable, Blanchard and Gottry offer practical strategies any professional can put into practice to improve his or her performance.


    Their website portal is definitely worth a visit @ http://ontime-ontarget.com/resources.html


    About the Authors


     Ken Blanchard, Ph.D., is a prominent, gregarious, sought-after author, speaker, and business consultant. He is usually characterized by friends, colleagues, and clients as one of the most insightful, powerful, and passionate men in business today. Blanchard's impact as a writer is far reaching. His perennial bestsellers include Raving Fans and Whale Done! He is the Chief Spiritual Officer of The Ken Blanchard Companies, a full-service global management training and consulting company that he and his wife, Dr. Marjorie Blanchard, founded in 1979 in San Diego. He is also cofounder of The Center for FaithWalk Leadership, a nonprofit ministry committed to challenging and equipping people to Lead Like Jesus.


    Steve Gottry (Right) was the founder and president of Gottry Communications Group, Inc., a full-service advertising agency and video production firm based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He formed the company in 1970, and served a variety of organizations across the nation. Among his clients were HarperSanFrancisco, Career Press, Zondervan Publishing House, Prudential Commercial Real Estate, Warner Bros., World Wide Pictures, United Properties, Alpha Video, NewTek, Inc., Pemtom Homes, and Standard Publishing. His firm was the winner of a number of national awards including three Silver Microphones for radio, awards for direct mail and film from the International Advertising Festival of New York, and a 2003 Aegis Award of Excellence for video.

    Number 2: Choices That Change Lives: 15 Ways to Find More Purpose, Meaning, and Joy by Hal Urban





    Editorial Review - Reed Business Information (c) 2005


    These three books follow the popular "point" formula for life change but are written from different vantage points and geared toward different audiences. Cohen, a speaker and author of 20 inspirational books, offers ten common reasons for why maladaptive thinking saps people's energy and undermines the quality of their lives. With evangelical zeal, he takes readers to task for such behaviors as trying to fix other people, getting fooled by appearances, and forgetting to enjoy the ride. If you don't tire of Cohen's overconfident tone and overuse of the word suck, there's good advice to be found here. Pinkins, a Tony Award-winning actress and acting instructor, has taken the principles that helped her succeed despite tremendous obstacles and organized them into self-knowledge exercises and daily disciplines. 

    The book is full of questionnaires and charts to help readers "discern" what they need to learn, "discover" what they really want, and "de-install" hot buttons. Chapters on disciplines include instructions for magnetizing one's good and making success inevitable. Pinkins's tough-love style will have a mixed reception, and not helping matters is her reliance on acronyms and diagrams. Teens, more so than adults, may find the book helpful. Urban (Life's Greatest Lessons) takes a different tack and highlights 15 areas of focus that can help anyone realize a more satisfying life. 

    In the chapter about forgiveness, for example, the author explains how that act can be learned, providing life stories of people who have changed their lives by forgiving. Rather than act like an overzealous cheerleader, Urban uses a soft sell to make his points; his easy-to-read book is a refreshing change from the pack. Recommended for all libraries. 




    About the Author


    Hal Urban was a high school teacher for many years and also taught at the University of San Francisco. He is a well-known leader in the Character Education movement and is in constant demand as a speaker at national conferences and school and community events. He raised three sons as a single father and now lives in Redwood City, California, with his wife, Cathy.







    Number 1: Success Built to Last: Creating a Life that Matters by Jerry I. Porras, Stewart Emery, and Mark Thompson 






    From Publishers Weekly
    Porras, who co-wrote the original Built to Last, teams with successful life coaching company co-founder Emery and top executive coach Thompson, to interview 300 successful people, tagged "builders," to uncover the secrets of their winning life journeys. Though there's a good deal of wisdom here (for example, when faced with failure, builders "let it go not because they're in denial, but because they must keep focused on what they're building"), the book does not skimp on the platitudes ("losers call it failure; winners call it learning"). The early portion of the book overdoes the authors' excitement about the range and depth of the interviews, setting the reader up for disappointment in the long, less-than-profound stretches. The high volume of contributions, however-from Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, Maya Angelou, Jack Welch, Stephen Jobs and a host of other well-known and lesser-known achievers-makes this book better suited for picking and choosing than reading cover-to-cover. Segmented into presentations on meaning, "ThoughtStyles" and action, lessons depend largely on common sense, a willingness to accept responsibility, and the idea that "pain or passion will make you good enough; but pain plus passion will point you to greatness."
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


    About the Authors





    JERRY PORRAS (Left) coauthored (with Jim Collins) Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies, which has sold over one million copies. He is Stanford Graduate School of Business Lane Professor of Organizational Behavior and Change, Emeritus, and lectures worldwide.


    STEWART EMERY (Right), considered one of the fathers of the Human Potential Movement, served as the first CEO of EST, cofounded Actualizations, and is the bestselling author of Actualizations: You Don’t Have to Rehearse to Be Yourself and The Owner’s Manual for Life. As a consultant, he asked questions that led MasterCard to its legendary “Priceless” campaign.


    MARK THOMPSON (Below Left) is an executive coach, advisor to senior management teams, award-winning audio book producer, and former executive producer of Schwab.com. Forbes Magazine listed him as one of America’s top venture investors with the “Midas” touch.