Rating 3.5 / 5 You would be totally forgiven for thinking that I only ever read business books but fiction is one of my favourite things to read. I haven’t read a lot of fiction in the last two years because I was building my business up and definitely wanted to take advantage of all my free time to up my business knowledge. I bought this book on kindle almost a year ago but wasn’t ensnared from the start so I stopped reading after the first chapter and had to restart reading it this time around. I love Douglas Kennedy. He’s one of my favourite authors, however, this book is not one of his best. Firstly, because I hate simple love stories and the only thing propelling me through most of this book was the knowledge that this love story would get more complicated at some point. I love complex stories. If anyone other than Douglas Kennedy had written this book I would not have finished it but I’m trying to maintain my record of having read every single one of his books – the majority of which are awesome. Up until the 75-80% of the book I thought the simplicity of the love story very much mirrored a Mills and Boon. The only thing different was that it was well written and the vocabulary used was a few notches up. After that it did get very good and incorporated the kind of complication and drama that I like but I wish the ending was a bit different. I wish Richard had developed a pair of balls and that is all I am going to say to avoid the spoiling the story for you should you decide to read it. Anyhow, despite my dissatisfaction with the end I have to agree that it was a better ending for a mature love story and anything else would have been too Mills & Boon.
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Rating 4.5 / 5 My love affair with Grant Cardone continues. This is the second of his books that I have read and whilst it deserves a good rating, there needs to be at least a point differential between this book and Sell of Be Sold. But because he’s Grant, I gave him an extra 0.5 – just for being awesome! The book was structured like a learning program with questions at the end to ensure you understood what had just been said and would implement the suggestions. I didn’t do the exercises as I was listening on the go but I took a few notes, as always: Many people don’t finish things they start because:
A sure-fire way to ensure you never get to first place is to compare yourself to losers! That is, people that are less capable than you. You have to take massive action to succeed. We’re socialized to be average, conformist and not to take grand actions. However, if you want above average success you need to:
More notes:
Finally, the placebo effect pretty much proves that what goes on in your mind can have REAL effects and consequences. Thoughts and beliefs massively impact outcomes. So the stories you tell yourself CAN and in fact, DO, become self-fulfilling. The book concluded by stating that your financial situation is the sum total of the action you took yesterday. Indeed, I have been a firm believer in this kind of thinking for decades: I honestly believe my results at A-level and indeed in university were the sum total of dedication and hard work that I had put in since I was 11. After a certain point, when we compare ourselves to someone and want to replicate their success don’t look at what they are doing now, look at what they were doing 10 years ago (or even further back) and start doing all that stuff too. Current actions simply reflect the cumulative effect of previous actions: big and small. Rating: 5/5 I actually started reading this book in Feb-2014 as Harry and I flew into India. I was due to be interviewed for The Apprentice and thought I needed to do a little research. Whilst I don’t agree with all of Lord Sugar’s opinions I enjoyed his book. He is definitely very switched on and the book was 100% authentic. It stays true to the persona that he portrays. I personally don’t find him to be “mean” on The Apprentice, he is realistic. He doesn’t pussyfoot around and he doesn’t like nonsense. I am very much like that too. Lord Sugar isn’t afraid to offend people. If he doesn’t like you, you will know about it. There’s no pretense with him; very few would dare to describe someone as “That nasally congested hag Janet Street-Porter”. Some Amazon reviews I read prior to this purchase thought he sounded misogynistic, I beg to differ. If you’re a small business the points he raised about maternity leave etc. were very valid. Employees just don’t see things the same way because they have a limited idea of how money is earned. Their concept of credit risk, exposure and the costs of hiring and training is very limited; importantly, even if you understand that stuff in principle you can never fully understand the pain until you are actually running a business. In the book, Lord Sugar goes through many of his thoughts including:
Some of his pearls of wisdom include:
Rating: 5/5 This is possibly the book I enjoyed reading the most in 2014. It made me feel pumped and introduced me to pig latin. Grant Cardone has a strong personality and strong opinions and they definitely come through in the book. My notes:
I loved the bit where he’s analyzing how much time there is in a day to spend working (I paraphrase): if I spend 2 hours with my kids, 1 hour with my wife, that’s 3 hours with my family; plus 7 hours in bed – what does that leave me? 14 hours. Wait am I doing this right, yep, that’s right that leaves me exactly 14 hours to do what? Grow my bidness! Grant Cardone just made the word bidness cool for me because he’s cool and he uses it. I was a little lost when he used the words itchbay, ickday, itshay but it later transpired they were b*tch, d*ck and sh*t in pig latin. It sounds a lot more acceptable in in pig latin. In summary, I love Grant Cardone and I would definitely do one of his sales programs. Rating: 3.9 / 5 A good listen. Achievement vs. Success Apparently every year, 40 to 50 business owners sit and talk about “stuff” at a Gathering of Titans on MIT’s campus. They don’t necessarily talk shop but about things pertaining to the bigger picture of life and business. Simon Sinek attended one of these talks. When asked, “How many of you have achieved your financial goals?” 80% of hands went up. However, when asked , “How many of you feelsuccessful?” Far fewer hands went up. Many of these great leaders knew what they did and how they did it but they no longer knewwhy they were doing it. Simon Sinek defines:
Achievement occurs when you pursue and reach something and a feeling of success comes when you are clear about why you wanted to attain that thing in the first place. I like this story because I could relate to it. I learnt very early in my career as an investment banker that financial achievements frequently didn’t lead to a feel of overall success in life. On Corporate Ethos In stating the general values of a good Southwest Airlines CEO, I loved the quote from Howard Putnam who said, “I’m not paying 5 bucks for a coffee; and what the heck is a Frappuccino anyway?” when Sinek suggested they take a break for a Starbucks. It isn’t that he was cheap but he simply didn’t attach much value to a hot a drink and no matter how wealthy he was he wasn’t going to pay for one, he was “an every man”. I respect that. On Money Money is never a cause, it’s always a result. I loved that quote too because I elaborate on a similar principle in the “Success” section of The Money Spot™ program. Rating: 3.75/5 This was an interesting read but not very memorable without notes. The only note I made was: Out of mind, out of business. I guess this is enough because all I have to ask myself every day is, what has my business done today to stay at the top of customers’ and fans’ minds. Overall, the idea and concept of “positioning” suggested that a product has to be positioned in the market so that, to a customer’s mind, you are somewhere along a hierarchy: e.g. the budgetbrand, the premium brand, the cool brand that you want people to see you ‘supporting’, the sexybrand, the glamorous brand etc. Position yourself as being the FIRST & BEST at something. No one remembers the 2nd place product. There is a great slideshow on SlideShare.net by Sameer Mathur elaborating the concept of positioning. What I love about the positioning concept is that it too emphasizes that we have moved beyond buying products especially in the developed world. It describes the 1950s as the “product era” – an era when you focused entirely on product features and benefits and the current time as the era for strategizing and focusing on “position”. The book had a range of interesting case studies too that I enjoyed listening to. Rating: 3.5 / 5 For the most part I found this book a little disappointing because it was overly focused on big businesses (fortune 500) as well as what I would call traditional models of creating a brand. The book was a compilation of thoughts from a range of authors. My notes included: Reasons People Buy Products:
If you don’t have a brand you have no way to create mass consumer loyalty. There are low levels of trust in large companies but high levels of trust in specific brands. Customer spend, customer retention and customer willingness to recommend a product are correlated with the strength of the relationship between the customer and the brand. Relationship Strength with a customer grows if you:
Ultimately, consistency leads to trust. I did finish the book so it was worth finishing but to be honest I didn’t learn as much from it as I had hoped. Rating: 5/5 This is one of the best books that I have read this year so far. It puts a fresh spin on a lot of ideas I have already thought about and is very well laid out. I could have made tonnes of notes as I listened to the book but I was usually running on a treadmill so it wasn't possible to do so, here are a few things I did manage to make a note of: You don't need more discipline, you just need to direct it better. In fact, you don't need discipline in order to get something done. You need the habit of doing that thing and just enough discipline to form the habit. Habits have been empirically shown to take an average of 66 days to form but can take as little as 18 days and as many as 200 days depending on the complexity of the habit one is trying to form. Success is about doing the right thing NOT about doing everything right. Yes, you can multi-task but no one can actually multi-task well! Will power. Those who can master it and are happy with delayed gratification achieve better results in life (see Walter Mischel study). Efficiency is doing the right thing, effectiveness is doing the thing right.
I have seen Hooked placed next to Brainfluence by Roger Dooley under neuromarketing books and I can tell you now that these books are not on the same planet. Brainfluence is a far better book: I have listened to the audiobook twice and I later bought the hard copy whereas I won't be listening to hooked again nor will I even get the paperback.
Hooked is not a bad book, it just didn't add much to my knowledge database. Rating: 2.8/5 This book was okay but it wasn't actually that memorable. I would say Contagious - Why Things Catch On by Jonah Berger is a much more enjoyable read and a much better framework for thinking about how to make products addictive. Contagious has many more examples/case studies and does not only focus on huge companies in the way that I felt Hooked does. In the Hooked model a trigger (internal or external) of some form sets in motion an action, e.g. check email. By taking the action the user gets a variable reward (e.g. they do not know what email they will get and are hence enticed by the element of surprise). In the last part of the model, the more the user has invested in the product in terms of time and effort, the less likely they are to switch to a competing product. The model: Rating: 3.5/5 If I was right at the beginning of my online marketing career I would probably have given this book a 5/5 rating, however, as it happens, I already knew a lot of the content. My main takeway from the book that I implemented immediately was to remove all comment moderation to encourage people to make comments and engage with my content. It was a great tip. At the time I read this book I had blocked comments on some of my YouTube videos to get people to come to my website but this was not working so I abandoned that strategy. The book is kind of self-promotional. I believe the authors are invested in a few of the tools they kept promoting. Websites I noted to check out include:In summary, if you are new to online marketing I would 101 Free Marketing by Jim Cockrumfirst and then this book. |
Heather Katsonga-WoodwardTime allowing, I love to read. If I read anything interesting, I will blog about it here. 2019 Life and Career PlannerCategories
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