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Friday, February 28, 2014

The main challenge of leadership is that it is poorly understood, and the public associates leadership with scandal and distrust. Also, people in leadership roles often do not understand how to lead. In The Leadership Contract, Vince Molinaro presents a fresh look at leadership, and offers a tangible, concise, and easy-to-understand document that outlines what leadership is: making tough decisions, obligation, hard work, and community. Molinaro explores the risks and rewards of leadership in the context of these concepts. He captures key lessons gleaned from his experiences as a consultant for leaders in a variety of organizations, and reframes leadership as an opportunity to build successful and sustainable organizations.

Friday, February 21, 2014

The Profitable Consultant

The Profitable Consultant tells beginning management consultants how and why to get started. Jay Niblick advocates and explains processes called “education-based marketing” and “the diagnostic sales process.” Consultants learn how to generate sales without selling, except for closing. These strategies are unconventional, but becoming widely popular. Consultants can employ many described strategies that will make business come to them. The Profitable Consultant also makes detailed cases against undercharging and accepting undesirable clients and for other practices that increase profitability, how to price consulting, and how to develop materials that provide residual income.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Every day, people face decisions small and large that must be made without a clear picture of the risks involved. In Risk Intelligence, Dylan Evans provides the tools and techniques to make such decisions easier and more fruitful. It turns out that different people have different levels of risk intelligence (RQ), which explains why some people consistently make wise decisions while others always make bad choices. Some aspects of RQ might be innate, but Evans’s research into individuals and groups who are especially good at assessing risks shows that anyone can boost his or her RQ. All it takes is a commitment to assign numbers to possible outcomes and carry out some simple calculations. Evans also explains the road blocks that society and the brain put in the way of making such a commitment and provides ways to overcome them.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Simply Management

Simply Managing is a shortened and updated version of Henry Mintzberg’s 2009 book Managing, and is based on his observations of 29 managers working in different fields. The book explains what management is and is not; what managers do and do not do; and the craft, science, and art of management. Mintzberg suggests that managers are constantly working amid chaos and that many managers are flawed, but that they can often correct their own shortcomings by focusing on what they do best. Moreover, Mintzberg suggests that instead of focusing on the stories of heroic managers who save their companies, managers ought to strive for the more natural goals of leading people, solving problems, and implementing plans for the future.