by Debbie King ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 28, 2020
A proactive and positive guide for business owners.
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King aims to help readers transform their businesses—and themselves, in the process.
This self-help work by a professional business coach covers some familiar territory in its advice to invest in one’s business and establish work-life balance. However, it adds unique value in its assertion that one can take control of one’s feelings about one’s business, which can, in turn, affect its practical trajectory. Part I focuses on how the brain perceives and dictates reality, often through a negative lens, due to its instinctive assumption of potential dangers. By consciously recognizing and reshaping such thoughts, King says, business owners can fall back in love with their work and achieve specific personal and professional goals. Part II encourages readers to build on this perspective by treating a business as an asset, avoiding overwork and overmanagement, carving out a successful niche, and working to decrease uncertainty. Part III provides a thoughtful overview of the steps required to sell one’s business, if necessary or desired. This is an excellent, high-level how-to guide to helping businesses owners regain their passion, and it offers valuable techniques for improving one’s life and careers. Some of King’s financial advice will be familiar to regular readers of entrepreneurship literature, but her strategy of replacing limiting beliefs with affirming interpretations may help businesspeople find a new sense of self and gain the confidence to take “massive” and meaningful action, as she suggests. King warns that such a shift in mentality is not easy, but it’s worth it to unlock one’s untapped potential.
A proactive and positive guide for business owners.Pub Date: Aug. 28, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5445-1642-4
Page Count: 280
Publisher: Lioncrest Publishing
Review Posted Online: Jan. 26, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Susanne Mariga ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 25, 2021
A vigorous and highly readable plan for building the finances of a new business.
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A program of cash-management techniques for aspiring entrepreneurs, aimed at a minority readership.
At the beginning of this business book, Mariga reflects on the birth of her daughter, Florence, and on the depressing prospect of returning to her corporate job and missing some of her baby’s early moments. She realized that she “wanted to show Florence…that I could, that she could, that anyone could be anything they wanted to be in this world.” To that end, she wanted to start her own business, and she “wanted to help entrepreneurs build successful businesses that provide opportunities for others.” In a sentiment reflected by others she’s interviewed, she says that she wanted to strengthen her family legacy, so she founded her own accounting firm. She paints a vivid picture of the hardscrabble early days of other minority business owners like herself, the child of an African American mother and a Chinese father who also had a family accounting business. She and others were “all hustling to acquire clients and build our businesses…and most of us had absolutely nothing to show for it.” She was inspired by Mike Michalowicz’s Profit First money management system, and the bulk of her book is devoted to an explanation of how to make this system work for minority business enterprises. (Michalowicz provides a foreword to the book.) One of the primary goals of Profit First is to build “a self-sustaining, debt-free company,” so a large part of Mariga’s work deals with the details of managing finances, building and abiding by budgets, and handling the swings of emotion that occur every step of the way. As sharply focused as these insights are, the author’s recollections of her own experiences are more rewarding, as when she tells readers of her brief time as a cut-rate accountant and learning that it was a mistake to try to compete on price. These stories, as well as financing specifics and clear encouragements (“Small changes and adjustments accumulate. Over time, they will lead you to your goal”), will make this book invaluable to entrepreneurs of all kinds.
A vigorous and highly readable plan for building the finances of a new business.Pub Date: May 25, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-7357759-0-6
Page Count: 230
Publisher: The Avant-Garde Project, LLC
Review Posted Online: April 7, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Jonah Berger ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 7, 2023
Perhaps not magic but appealing nonetheless.
Want to get ahead in business? Consult a dictionary.
By Wharton School professor Berger’s account, much of the art of persuasion lies in the art of choosing the right word. Want to jump ahead of others waiting in line to use a photocopy machine, even if they’re grizzled New Yorkers? Throw a because into the equation (“Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine, because I’m in a rush?”), and you’re likely to get your way. Want someone to do your copying for you? Then change your verbs to nouns: not “Can you help me?” but “Can you be a helper?” As Berger notes, there’s a subtle psychological shift at play when a person becomes not a mere instrument in helping but instead acquires an identity as a helper. It’s the little things, one supposes, and the author offers some interesting strategies that eager readers will want to try out. Instead of alienating a listener with the omniscient should, as in “You should do this,” try could instead: “Well, you could…” induces all concerned “to recognize that there might be other possibilities.” Berger’s counsel that one should use abstractions contradicts his admonition to use concrete language, and it doesn’t help matters to say that each is appropriate to a particular situation, while grammarians will wince at his suggestion that a nerve-calming exercise to “try talking to yourself in the third person (‘You can do it!’)” in fact invokes the second person. Still, there are plenty of useful insights, particularly for students of advertising and public speaking. It’s intriguing to note that appeals to God are less effective in securing a loan than a simple affirmative such as “I pay all bills…on time”), and it’s helpful to keep in mind that “the right words used at the right time can have immense power.”
Perhaps not magic but appealing nonetheless.Pub Date: March 7, 2023
ISBN: 9780063204935
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Harper Business
Review Posted Online: March 23, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2023
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