Business and Personal Development

Friday, November 28, 2008

The Secrets of CEOs, Steve Tappin & Andrew Cave





Buy it now from Blackwell Books


Published by Nicholas Brealey


Wise words from the top

How would you like the opportunity to quiz 150 leaders of major organisations about how they run their businesses? That’s exactly what Tappin and Cave do in this 300-page encyclopaedia of expertise.

For the first time, claim the authors, 150 top chief executives reveal what it is really like to be a CEO; what it has taken them to succeed; what motivates them.

Published just before the world economy imploded, the book examines the trends shaping the world, the early stages of the ‘credit crunch’ and the resulting fundamental change; change that most agreed was inevitable – and now have been proved right.

Later in the book, the different types of leader and their unique approaches are put under the spotlight. There is some inevitable simplification – for instance reducing leadership behaviour to five ‘types’ – but the conclusions have the air of authenticity and will be most useful in helping the reader understand his/her own ‘type’ and consequent potential shortcomings.

There is sound advice for up and coming leaders,` together with a dire health/happiness/relationships warning – just in case anyone believes the world of the CEO is one of endless milk and honey.

Not an ‘easy’ read but one well worth the effort.

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Future Files, Richard Watson




Published by Nicholas Brealey


Buy it now from Blackwell Books




Predicting the next 50 years

Will machines ever achieve true intelligence and overthrow humans? Will your house protect you from intruders, keep your fridge stocked and suggest ideas for dinner tonight? And will you soon be able to control your computer by thinking at it?

Richard Watson, advisor on the future to many companies, explores these and other exciting topics in his new book.

Of course no one can accurately predict the future and the farther ahead one looks, the less accurate become the forecasts. Undoubtedly things we have not yet dreamt of will shape the actual future. Nonetheless, Mr Watson paints some provocative pictures and certainly makes one think. Some of his pictures are dark and frightening, others bright and cheerful.

For example, he predicts ‘a plethora of micromedia’ that will appeal to every interest – you will choose what, when and where to be entertained. We are seeing the start of this, of course with stop and play live TV, MP3 downloads and the like. The ability to produce our own videos etc cheaply and to distribute the results via the Internet also makes it ever more likely that Andy Warhol’s ’15 minutes of fame’ prediction will soon come to pass.

Mr Watson discusses culture, science, politics, money, transport - and more. He provides an extinction timeline so you can find out when (according to Watson) coins will cease to be used, glaciers will finally disappear (both between 2030 and 2040) or spelling will finally succumb, presumably thnks to txtg.

As for innovations: child-care robots anyone? And don’t forget invisibility, landing a man on Mars and virtual holidays (I think I already take those).

Fun, fascinating and thought provoking. Enjoy but don’t have nightmares.

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