Business, Investing & Economics

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“A key take away from this important book is the imperative to ‘know your place,’ both those places where you live, which are in flux and constantly evolving, and also those places with whi

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“. . . thorough, thoughtful, and exceptionally well written. . . . Page One is a most encompassing volume on the issue of the future of journalism and newspapers. . . .

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“The model that Mr. Marks presents for market assessment alone is worth the price of the book.”

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“Surdam’s book represents the best and probably the only solid study of major-league baseball’s economic situation during the Depression.”

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“Mr. Tracy presents solid, substantive material in an accessible way.”

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Brand Failures is the rare business book that’s actually a fun read for nonbusiness people.

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Do you remember plodding through Eliyahu Goldratt’s The Goal? It was a very good book, but seemed to take forever to get to its key points.

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Ideas are profoundly important, yet many are innocent of the phenomenal power of ideas. Renowned economist John Maynard Keyes proclaimed:

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In 1975 Charles Ellis published an article in the highly regarded Financial Analysts Journal that advanced the provocative proposition that investing is a game dominated by losers.

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There are wine books written by former English and history majors, about the poetry and mystery of wine. There are wine books written by former Ph.D.

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Go to any supermarket magazine rack and you’ll encounter a treasure trove of “list articles,” which claim to give you such things as “The 7 Keys to Losing Weight,” “10 Things You Need to Do right N

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Ms. Kelly has taken on a very timely subject and brought it into focus via her experiences in dealing with the “repressed” economy of this country.

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If your main goal in life is to be a supervisor, the boss, or the Big Kahuna, you might want to rethink that career goal by reading You Can’t Fire Everyone: And Other Lessons from an Accidental

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What makes the mind of a business visionary—someone like Richard Branson or Steve Jobs—different from everyone else?

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In The Thank You Economy, Gary Vaynerchuk shows why he’s such a popular speaker and author in the business world and one of the top 100 people followed on Twitter.

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“Greed is good: Philosophy will help you to enjoy it without guilt.” Such might be the motto of Why Businessmen Need Philosophy, a compilation of essays dedicated to the thought of Ayn Ran

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Basic manufacturing—however that is now defined—has fallen on hard times in the United States.

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The pillars of commerce—trade and finance—now seem like lost relics in an archaeological dig.

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In The Power Formula for Linkedin Success: Kick-Start Your Business, Brand, and Job Search, author Wayne Breitbarth deems a user’s profile on the online business networking site LinkedIn a

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Everything Is Obvious is sectioned into two parts, the first, Common Sense, deals with the recognition that commonsense is anything but, and explores various types of errors in commonsense

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Now, after more than a decade into the new millennium, it is time to start seeing, acting, and doing things from a 21st century perspective.

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Sell Yourself First is two books in one, both good.

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