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The Best Business
Books
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To
purchase item from Amazon.com, click on image or title.
Current
Non-Fiction Bestsellers
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Let's
Get Real or Let's Not Play (audio...
From the cover: Selling is the second oldest profession, often
confused with the first.
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From the cover: Written in China more than 2,000 years ago,
Sun Tzu's classic The Art of War is the first known study of the planning
and conduct of military operations.
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From the cover: The One-Minute Manager, adapted from Blanchard's
classic book which sold more than a million copies, is a parable about
a young man in search of world-class management skills.
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From the cover: The Greatest Salesman in the World is a tiny
book, and it is a treasure. First published in 1968, Og Mandino's
classic remains an invaluable guide to a philosophy of salesmanship.
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From the cover: "Who is John Gault?" He said he
would stop the motor of the world... and he did. But who is John Galt?
A destroyer or a liberator? Why does he fight his battle, not against
his enemies, but against those who need him most?
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From the cover: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful
Lessons in Personal Change was a groundbreaker when it was first published
in 1990, and it continues to be a business bestseller with more than
10 million copies sold.
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From the cover: Levinson and Godin collaborate to produce
an irreverent handbook on marketing a product or service. Unlike their
preceding publications, this focuses on details: for instance, business
cards and their uses, case histories of direct-mail postcards, and
ideas about publicity, pricing, and logos.
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From the cover: Michael Gerber's The E-Myth Revisited should
be required listening for anyone thinking about starting a business
or for those who have already taken that fateful step. The title refers
to the author's belief that entrepreneurs--typically brimming with
good but distracting ideas--make poor businesspeople.
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From the cover: One day in 1992, Thomas Friedman toured a
Lexus factory in Japan and marveled at the robots that put the luxury
cars together. That evening, as he ate sushi on a Japanese bullet
train, he read a story about yet another Middle East squabble between
Palestinians and Israelis. And it hit him: Half the world was lusting
after those Lexuses, or at least the brilliant technology that made
them possible, and the other half was fighting over who owned which
olive tree.
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