A radio and TV host and best-selling author of What I Know for Sure offers the best advice that he has gleaned from this successful life. Reprint.
This book offers a journey through the pitfalls that cause 90% of companies to crash—and the crucial remedies entrepreneurs can use to avoid (or fix) them. Kim Hvidkjær was 29 years old when he became a millionaire.
In The Set-Up-to-Fail Syndrome, Jean-Francois Manzoni and Jean-Louis Barsoux show how this insidious cycle hurts everyone: employees stop volunteering ideas, preventing your organization from getting the most from them; you lose energy to ...
Miller's ability. That was where Davis' ego obliterated common sense. It also was a lack of respect for what Miller had accomplished. The players knew it and didn't appreciate it. Davis understandably didn't want the Browns to pout and ...
Presents information how to spot and sidestep roadblocks on the entrepreneurial journey and sets readers on a path to startup success.
only “father” I really knew, I remember him giving us discipline and teaching us respect, well trying anyway. It wasn't easy raising kids that ... I told you most of my memories really didn't make any sense. I now know a few things, ...
Fail Fast or Win Big, based on the author's more than 20 years spent helping small companies become market leaders, helps you get right down to it with strategies for: * Leveraging your own network for expert advice and potential early ...
... “Sociopsychological Predictors of Affiliation with Alcoholics Anonymous: A Longitudinal Study of Treatment Success,” Social Psychiatry 5 (1970): 51–52; Hal Arkowitz and Scott O. Lilienfeld, “Does Alcoholics Anonymous Work?
The Up Side of Down is a book that just might change the way you lead your life.
A collection of research-supported observations, by a school parent educator and former State school monitor, providing a hard-hitting "behind the scenes" look at many of the underlying systemic problems with America's schools in the 21st ...
An award-winning professor of economics at MIT and a Harvard University political scientist and economist evaluate the reasons that some nations are poor while others succeed, outlining provocative perspectives that support theories about ...