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FOUNDER BRAND

TURN YOUR STORY INTO YOUR COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

Savvy founders hoping to avoid the pitfalls on the road to success may benefit from this book’s engaging tips.

Awards & Accolades

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A book for entrepreneurs and marketing specialists that encourages company founders to maximize their brand by telling their own stories.

Gerhardt wants readers to understand the power of their brand when marketing their company, arguing that “people buy from people.” When consumers feel a connection to a person, he asserts, rather than a company, they’re more likely to become customers. The author’s first step in building a founder’s brand is to help make them into a storyteller, and to that end, he provides a series of questions to lead founders through the process of identifying and articulating the narrative of their lives and businesses. He encourages them to be personal and vulnerable, sharing details of their lives that will help others connect with their struggles and triumphs. He continues by asking founders to identify exactly who their customers are and to show what problem the company is fixing for them. These steps culminate in an “explainer,” which briefly and succinctly tells prospective customers the who, what, and why of one’s company. Gerhardt also wants founders to figure out who their role models, mentors, and “anti-role models” are so they can follow the successes and avoid the challenges of those who’ve come before. The second part of the book effectively focuses on how to get a founder’s brand and story out to potential customers, using detailed examples of how to use social media podcasts and speaking opportunities to stand out from the crowd. Overall, this is a well-structured and encouraging book made specifically for those who are just starting down the path of building a business. Gerhardt generously shares what he’s learned from years of experience and expresses hope for others’ success in a genuine manner. He does tend to lean heavily on instances from his own career, but he also incorporates examples from the experiences of well-known figures such as Spanx founder Sara Blakely and Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

Savvy founders hoping to avoid the pitfalls on the road to success may benefit from this book’s engaging tips.

Pub Date: Feb. 15, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5445-2341-5

Page Count: 250

Publisher: Lioncrest Publishing

Review Posted Online: March 9, 2022

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A PIECE OF THE ACTION

HOW THE MIDDLE CLASS JOINED THE MONEY CLASS

A wonderful pudding of a book that serves up large helpings of US socioeconomic history over the past 35 years or so. The title and subtitle notwithstanding, GQ columnist Nocera never makes clear precisely what he means by the middle class. Nor does he provide a systematic reckoning on the financial times since 1958 (when BankAmerica launched what became the Visa credit card). What he does offer, though, are thoroughly engrossing takes on the breakthrough innovations that democratized America's monetary life. There are tellingly detailed briefings on the largely unsung creators of money-market mutual funds (including the first to give investors check-writing privileges), NOW accounts, negotiable CDs, no-load mutual funds, and other financial services that an affluent society now takes for granted. The author also profiles the bankers, Wall Streeters, and others who played leading roles in a revolution that profoundly altered Main Street's attitudes toward credit, debt, investment, and savings. Cases in point range from Peter Lynch (Fidelity's star portfolio manager until his 1990 retirement) through Charles Schwab (of discount brokerage fame), Citicorp's Walter Wriston, and Marshall Loeb (former editor of Money, which continues to overstate the rewards while minimizing the risks of do-it-yourself capitalism). Assessed as well are the convulsive consequences of Paul Volcker's conquest of inflation, deregulation of depository institutions, the stock market's 1987 crash, and the low interest rates that channeled increasing amounts of money into equities during the early 1990s. Conspicuous by its absence, though, is any sustained coverage of the S&L scandals, insider trading, the takeover boom, junk bonds, the assets controlled by insurance companies, derivative securities products, exchange-listed options, futures contracts, and allied aspects of the domestic financial scene. Even so, Nocera delivers a savvy rundown on the landmark developments that in less than four decades have made consumer finance a multilateral bazaar in which beating the markets is a populist pastime.

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-671-66756-4

Page Count: 480

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1994

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TALKING FROM 9 TO 5

HOW WOMEN'S AND MEN'S CONVERSATIONAL STYLES AFFECT WHO GETS HEARD, WHO GETS CREDIT, AND WHAT GETS DONE AT WORK

The workplace (primarily the office) is the setting for this third volume of Tannen's Linguistics Lite trilogy. Tannen (Sociolinguistics/Georgetown) sticks close to the main idea she popularized almost a decade ago in That's Not What I Meant (1985): Men and women have different conversational styles that are equally valid (though unequally valued). Here, she describes women's disadvantages in the workplace: They are paid less than men for the same work and face ``sexism'' (a term Tannen keeps dubiously between quotation marks), a glass ceiling, and sexual harassment. Why do such problems persist? Tannen considers the difference in male and female conversational style as a primary cause. Women are likely to have an indirect manner, to apologize more, and to offer softer criticism; they're problem preventers instead of heroic crisis solvers; they generally strive for the appearance of equality with, not superiority to, their co-workers. Many (male) bosses overlook the value of this style. Tannen concludes that women should go with their own approach, but they should also try to be assertive and worry less about being liked than about being competent. Yet in the next breath, she acknowledges that women who act assertive may bring unpleasant consequences on themselves. In the end, she reaches for platitudes, blithely recommending that workers adopt a mix of styles and that managers learn to recognize and appreciate quality in diverse forms. She says ``on that happy day, the glass ceiling will become a looking glass through which a fair percentage of Alices will be able to step.'' Readers of her earlier books will find much that is familiar, from the research to the conclusions. Women facing a hostile work environment and seeking substantive improvements in their situation are likely to find that Tannen's recourse to ``stylistic differences'' ultimately offers little help. (First printing of 200,000; first serial to New York Times Magazine and Redbook; Book-of-the-Month Club alternate selection; Quality Paperback Book Club main selection; Fortune Book Club main selection; author tour)

Pub Date: Oct. 19, 1994

ISBN: 0-688-11243-9

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1994

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