Bill Gates’s Favorite Business Book – WSJ:
I was at the beach over the summer and the condo had a book by Bill Gates.
I started reading it and was intrigued. I thought I had read it before, but it was still very interesting. As I’m skimming through into the second chapter, it hit me like a metric ton of CO2. This book was more than 2 decades old, 1994, The Road Ahead. Knowing how it really ended, I skipped ahead to see what his forecasts were for the future of chipdom and computing. He was straight on in several cases.
The point is that reading classic business books is fascinating and it is retrospectical (if that were a word).
This WSJ article talks about the great business books from the perspective of the richest man in the world (as founder of Microsoft), turned most philanthropic man in the work (with the Gates Foundation). When he takes time to write about what he reads, you aught to take notice.
The great business books include, of course, Drucker, Porter, Peters, Senge, …
Jim Collins G2G and BTL are, well, great!:-). Level five leaders, yeap. By chance, is still growing on me. (See references below.)
Most people will include Sun Tzu with the Art of War, and Machiavelli.
operations management. See the section on Business Fables (2011) in Wikipedia
for some of the coolest business novels to read as an MBA student. Eli Goldratt did a follow-on to The Goal (2001) that was actually the text book associated with the novel; it was called, Beyond the Goal (2004).
Business fable.
(2011, August 3). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved
15:02, August 12, 2011, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Business_fable&oldid=442779574
to great. New York, NY: HarperCollins.
J. (2005). Level 5 Leadership: The Triumph of Humility and Fierce Resolve.
(cover story). Harvard Business Review,
83(7/8), 136-146.
J. (2012). Effective Management. Leadership
Excellence, 29(4), 3.
J., & Hansen, M.T. (2011). Great by choice: Uncertainty, chaos, and
luck–Why some thrive despite them all. New York, NY: HarperBusiness.
speaks on the theory of constraints (Your Coach in a Box). Audiobook.
Goldratt, E. M. and Cox, J. (2004). The goal: A process of ongoing improvement. Great Barrington, MA: North River Press.
H., & Christensen, J. (2009). Fish!: A Remarkable Way to Boost Morale and
Improve Results. [Kindle Edition] Hyperion.