• The Compound Effect By Darren Hardy

    By Perseus

    No gimmicks. No Hyperbole. No Magic Bullet. The Compound Effect is based on the principle that decisions shape your destiny. Little, everyday decisions will either take you to the life you desire or to disaster by default. Darren Hardy, publisher of Success Magazine , presents The Compound Effect , a distillation of the fundamental principles that have guided the most phenomenal achievements in business, relationships, and beyond. This easy-to-use, step-by-step operating system allows you to multiply your success, chart your progress, and achieve any desire. If you’re serious about living an extraordinary life, use the power of The Compound Effect to create the success you want.

    2,500
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  • The Ten-Day MBA 4th Edition by Steven Silbiger

    The Ten-Day MBA 4th Edition by Steven Silbiger

    The 4th edition of The Ten-Day MBA 4th Edition by Steven Silbiger includes the latest topics taught at America’s top business schools, from corporate ethics and compliance to financial planning and real estate to leadership and negotiation.

    3,000
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  • The Personal MBA: Master the Art of Business

    By Josh Kaufman

    The Personal MBA explains concepts such as:

    • The Iron Law of the Market: Why every business is limited by the size and quality of the market it attempts to serve-and how to find large, hungry markets.
    • The 12 Forms of Value: Products and services are only two of the twelve ways you can create value for your customers.
    • The Pricing Uncertainty Principle: All prices are malleable. Raising your prices is the best way to dramatically increase profitability – if you know how to support the price you’re asking.
    • 4 Methods to Increase Revenue: There are only four ways a business can bring in more money. Do you know what they are?
    True leaders aren’t made by business schools – they make themselves, seeking out the knowledge, skills, and experience they need to succeed. Read this book and you will learn the principles it takes most business professionals a lifetime of trial and error to master.
    2,500
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  • How to Get from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be

    By Jack Canfield

    Within minutes of reading this book, you will want – and be able – to apply its clear, direct and highly effective principles to your own life. Jack Canfield, the author of Chicken Soup for the Soul, built an $80 million business from nothing. Now he shares his key techniques and unique insights so that you too can achieve success in everything you do.

    1,500
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  • How Will You Measure Your Life?

    By Clayton M. Christensen

    In 2010 world-renowned innovation expert Clayton M. Christensen gave a powerful speech to the Harvard Business School’s graduating class. Drawing upon his business research, he offered a series of guidelines for finding meaning and happiness in life. He used examples from his own experiences to explain how high achievers can all too often fall into traps that lead to unhappiness.

    The speech was memorable not only because it was deeply revealing but also because it came at a time of intense personal reflection: Christensen had just overcome the same type of cancer that had taken his father’s life. As Christensen struggled with the disease, the question “How do you measure your life?” became more urgent and poignant, and he began to share his insights more widely with family, friends, and students.

    1,500
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  • What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures

    By Malcolm Gladwell

     

    What is the difference between choking and panicking? Why are there dozens of varieties of mustard but only one variety of ketchup? What do football players teach us about how to hire teachers? What does hair dye tell us about the history of the 20th century?

    In the past decade, Malcolm Gladwell has written three books that have radically changed how we understand our world and ourselves: The Tipping PointBlink, and Outliers. Now, in What the Dog Saw, he brings together, for the first time, the best of his writing from The New Yorker over the same period.

    3,000
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  • Factfulness: Ten Reasons We’re Wrong About The World – And Why Things Are Better Than You Think

    ‘Hans Rosling tells the story of “the secret silent miracle of human progress” as only he can. But Factfulness does much more than that. It also explains why progress is so often secret and silent and teaches readers how to see it clearly.’ MELINDA GATES

    ‘A hopeful book about the potential for human progress when we work off facts rather than our inherent biases.’ BARACK OBAMA

    7,000
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  • How to Work a Room by Susan RoAne

    In How to Work a Room: 25th Anniversary Edition, the classic, bestselling book on socializing has been thoroughly revised to stay in tune with todays culture and current research.

    4,000
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  • The Art of Creative Thinking: 89 Ways to See Things Differently

    In short and engaging entries, this deceptively simple volume presents examples of creative thinkers from the worlds of writing, music, architecture, painting, technology, and more, shedding light on their process, and showing how each of us can learn from them to improve our lives and our work.

    Subjects range from the grueling practice schedule of the Beatles and the relentless revisions of Tolkien, Sondheim, and Picasso to the surprisingly slapdash creation of The Simpsons. You’ll learn about the most successful class in history (in which every student won a Nobel Prize), how frozen peas were invented, why J.K. Rowling likes to write in cafes, and how 95 percent of Apocalypse Now ended up on the cutting-room floor. Takeaways include:

    – Doubt everything all the time.
    – Plan to have more accidents.
    – Be mature enough to be childish.
    – Contradict yourself more often.
    – Be practically useless.
    – If it ain’t broke, break it.
    – Surprise yourself.
    – Look forward to disappointment.
    – Be as incompetent as possible.

    4,000
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  • The E-myth Contractor: Why Most Contractors’ Businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It

    With The E-Myth Contractor, Michael E. Gerber launches a series of books that apply the E-Myth to specific types of small businesses. The first is aimed at contractors.

    This book reveals a radical new mind-set that will free contractors from the tyranny of an unprofitable, unproductive routine. With specific tips on topics as crucial as planning, money and personnel management, The E-Myth Contractor teaches readers how to:

    • Implement the ingenious turnkey system of management—a means of creating a business prototype that reflects the business owner’s unique set of talents and replicating and distributing them among employees and customers.
    • Recognise and manage the four forms of money—income, profit, flow and equity.
    • Harness the power of change to expand the company.

    The book also provides help on a larger level, leading readers towards becoming business visionaries by relinquishing tactical work and embracing strategic work, by letting go to gain control. Once put into action, Gerber’s revolutionary ideas promise not only to help contractors build successful businesses, but successful lives as well.

    3,500
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  • Secrets of Happy People: 50 Techniques to Feel Good

    By Matt Avery

    What do happy people know that the rest of us don’t?

    Do they have a secret recipe for success?

    Is there a special alchemy to make it work?

    The Secrets of Happy People reveals the 50 things you need to know to feel more fulfilled, experience more joy and spend more time doing things that make you happy. Some will surprise you, and all will inspire you. Put these 50 simple strategies together and you have a great recipe for a better life, a formula that will unlock the secrets and uncover your potential.

    3,500
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  • Islam and The Business Mind-Set

    By  Ilyas Salim

    “In this day and age, reading is often limited to smartphones and Facebook posts, and not many people read large detailed books. I personally enjoy reading small, straight to the point books, where I can take action from bullet points. Hence, this book is designed to fill that gap in the market.”

    5,000
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  • Weology: How Everybody Wins When We Comes Before Me

    Canada’s most engaging banker shares his strategies for operating in a radically different way in our ever-changing business world.

    Nothing is average or normal at Tangerine (formerly ING Direct)-not the name, not the style of banking, not the leadership. And Peter Aceto is not your average executive. The president and CEO of Tangerine runs his business in an unorthodox and intuitively human way. The bank has no tellers, no lineups, no bricks-and-mortar branches for its customers to visit. But people are at the core of the operation: loyal, happy and engaged employees who help thousands of customers save their money, buy homes and enjoy a healthy financial life.

    Weology provides an in-depth look into the “people-first” leadership strategies that have made Tangerine Canada’s leading direct bank, with more than 1.9 million clients and close to $40 billion in total assets. As the company’s guiding hand for more than six years, Aceto thrives in his role by relying strongly on transparency, trust and accessibility. He doesn’t have a luxurious corner office (instead, he sits among the other employees), and he often responds to calls and emails from customers directly.

    Aceto’s relentless focus is on driving a type of radical thinking that delivers superior and unparalleled results for Tangerine and the financial well-being of Canadians, and that demonstrates largely how business will be led in the future. In Weology, Aceto shares many stories that show how his philosophy and strategies have made him and his business so successful.

    4,500
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  • Fully Connected: Social Health in an Age of Overload

    Shortlisted for the CMI’s Management Book of the Year Award 2018

    Twenty-five years after the arrival of the Internet, we are drowning in data and deadlines. Humans and machines are in fully connected overdrive – and starting to become entwined as never before. Truly, it is an Age of Overload. We can never have imagined that absorbing so much information while trying to maintain a healthy balance in our personal and professional lives could feel so complex, dissatisfying and unproductive.

    Something is missing. That something, Julia Hobsbawm argues in this ground-breaking book, is Social Health, a new blueprint for modern connectedness. She begins with the premise that much of what we think about healthy ways to live have not been updated any more than have most post-war modern institutions, which are themselves also struggling in the twenty-first century. In 1946, the World Health Organization defined ‘health’ as ‘a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.’ What we understood by ‘social’ in the middle of the last century now desperately needs an update.

    5,000
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  • Principles: Life and Work Hardcover

    #1 New York Times Bestseller

    “Significant…The book is both instructive and surprisingly moving.” —The New York Times

    Ray Dalio, one of the world’s most successful investors and entrepreneurs, shares the unconventional principles that he’s developed, refined, and used over the past forty years to create unique results in both life and business—and which any person or organization can adopt to help achieve their goals.

    11,000
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  • Don’t Get a Job, Build a Business

    By Joan Baker

    This book is full of the kind of information you need to run a small business successfully – whether you are just starting out, or you have an established business and you want to develop it and ensure its survival. Through a series of ‘Killer Questions,’ the authors highlight all the important things you need to think about to make your business a success and ensure you are heading in the right direction. The book is divided into three sections: the first deals with the business owner themselves, the second addresses other people involved in the business, whether they are customers, suppliers, staff or consultants, and the third looks at the structure of and planning in the business. The informal approach and short chapters mean that the book can either be read straight through or be dipped in and out of for easy reference. The authors have a combination of fifty years’ business experience between them and are both currently involved in business training and coaching.

    1,500
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