News & Opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
Break Your Own Rules
By Sally Haldorson
Author of Employees First, Customers Second, Vineet Nayar, recently wrote a couple of blog posts included on the HBR Blog Network that started a bit of a dust-up in comments. First, at the beginning of the month, he asked the question: "Are Women Dissatisfied Enough? " and went on to assert two "pre-conditions" were needed--in addition to an enabling corporate environment--to improve the successes of women in business.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
The FT/Goldman Sachs Book of the Year Shortlist
By Porchlight
The shortlist for the seventh Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Book of the Year has been released. It includes: Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty by Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo, Public Affairs Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar by Barry Eichengreen, Oxford University Press Triumph of the City: How Our Greatest Invention Makes Us Richer, Smarter, Greener, Healthier and Happier by Edward L.
Categories: news-opinion, publishing-industry
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Blog / News & Opinion
Public Parts
By Porchlight
Here's a perfect example: we're online, I'm writing a blog post, and you have the option to comment back, to which I also can comment back. We can share information and thoughts more freely than ever. Ideas spread, and connections are made.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
ChangeThis: Issue 86
By Porchlight
The Art of Hassle Map Thinking by Adrian J. Slywotzky with Karl Weber “We’ve found that organizations that excel at demand creation . .
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
The 100 Best Business Books of All Time: Updated & Expanded!
By Sally Haldorson
We're excited to announce an updated and expanded paperback version of The 100 Best Business Books of All Time available 11/1/11 from Portfolio. More content--expanded reviews of the Takeaway chapter books (including Thinkertoys, The First 90 Days, Beyond the Core, and The Lexus and the Olive Tree); new sidebars (including decision-making, visual thinking, and 1982, the watershed year for business books); and a new introduction and closing manifesto--means more for you to learn and enjoy. The perfect book for you to put on your Christmas list and read to inspire you for the new year!
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
The Author Pow Wow
By Porchlight
Join us this December 4, 5, and 6th in Austin, TX for the 2011 Author Pow Wow. CLICK HERE TO REGISTER NOW PUBLISHING: DO WHAT WORKS This year’s Author Pow Wow encourages authors to do what works. Sounds simple, right?
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
What's Your Plan B?
By Porchlight
When we have an idea, or work on a project, it can get absorbed into us. We dream of what it will be like when realized, and imagine all the great things that will happen because of its creation. Eventually, it can be hard to separate our imagination from the unknown variables of reality.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
To Be or Not to Be...Creative
By Sally Haldorson
A friend posted on Facebook a link to this article, with the somewhat obvious title, "People are biased against creative ideas, studies find," and it's contents have stuck with me all week. It comes from a website called PhysOrg which I've never heard of despite having a science geek for a husband. PhysOrg's mission as described on it's website is "to provide the most complete and comprehensive daily coverage of the full sweep of science, technology, and medicine news.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
Nothing to Lose
By Porchlight
Business books have a certain stigma attached to them. For non-fans, they might seem intimidating, or pointless, depending which end of the judgment spectrum you're on. The assumption is that "they're for other, more business-types of people.
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / News & Opinion
Icon + Icon, Intertwined
By Sally Haldorson
I typed my first high school papers, my first non-hand-written stories, on an electric typewriter--a hand-me-down from a cousin--on the floor of my childhood bedroom. But when I got to college, there was a bank of Apple IIe computers in the dorm's lab and over the years I often spent all night in the company of those small white boxes, a happy computer face greeting me each time I came back from the cafeteria full and ready to settle back down to the grind of churning out the multitude of 10-20 page papers required for every class every term. Entering grad school, I bought a Macintosh Performa so that I could write my stories and more of those papers at my apartment while eating ramen noodles.
Categories: news-opinion