GBR

2008, Volume 11, Issue 4

The Book Corner

The Book Corner offers reviews of a variety of books on business topics by Graziadio faculty.

Comments

In this issue:

age

Driving Growth Through Innovation: How Leading Firms Are Transforming Their Futures

By Robert Tucker
Berrett-Koehler, 2008

Reviewed by Edward Rockey, PhD, Professor of Applied Behavioral Science

4stars

This is a rather comprehensive summary of key innovation concepts culled from a broad spectrum and clumped under the umbrella of "growth. Read more...

 

Professor Michael Kinsman,CPA, PhD, Professor of Finance and Accounting, takes a close look at three new books on surviving and thriving in today's real estate market:

emergingEmerging Real Estate Markets: How to Find and Profit from Up-and-Coming Areas

By David Lindahl
Wiley, 2008

4 stars

fight foreclosureFight Foreclosure!: How to Cope with a Mortgage You Can't Pay, Negotiate with Your Bank, and Save Your Home

By David Petrovich
Wiley, 2008

3stars

advanced investing techniques

The ForeclosureS.com Guide to Advanced Investing Techniques You Won't Learn Anywhere Else

By Alexis McGee
Wiley, 2008

3stars

 

flight plan

Managing Brand You: 7 Steps to Creating Your Most Successful Self

By Jerry S. Wilson and Ira Blumenthal
AMACOM, 2008

Reviewed by Leo A. Mallette, EdD, Adjunct; Decision Sciences and Marketing

2stars

This book should be used by people who want to reinvent or rebrand themselves, but haven't been exposed to personal branding in the last decade. Read more...

 

Judgment

Judgment: How Winning Leaders Make Great Calls

By Noel M. Tichy and Warren G. Bennis
Penguin Group, 2007

Reviewed by Sean D. Jasso, PhD, Practitioner Faculty of Economics

5stars

The book effectively accomplishes its stated goal: to explore and understand why some leaders have much greater success in exercising good judgment than others. Read more...


myself

Marketing to Hispanics: A Strategic Approach to Assessing and Planning Your Initiative

By Terry J. Soto
Kaplan Publishing, 2006

Reviewed by Dave McMahon, DBA, Associate Professor of Marketing

4stars

With U.S. Hispanic purchasing power projected to hit one trillion dollars by 2010, Marketing to Hispanics is a timely guide on how to approach this market opportunity. Read more...


persuasion

The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What it Means

By George Soros
Public Affairs, 2008

Reviewed by Davide Accomazzo, MBA, Adjunct Professor of Finance

4stars

In light of the recent market turmoil, Soros revisits his theory of reflexivity to try to explain the historical forces behind such crises. Read more...


persuasion

Social Intelligence: The New Science of Human Relationships

By Daniel Goleman
Bantam, 2007

Reviewed by Esther Bleuel, MA, MFT, MDR, and William Bleuel, PhD, Professor of Decision Sciences

4stars

The most important take-away of this book is the impact of our social interaction on our health. Read more...


age curve

The Age Curve: How to Profit from the Coming Demographic Storm

By Kenneth W. Gronbach
AMACOM, 2007

Reviewed by Jody Brightman, PhD, Adjunct Faculty in Marketing

4stars

The Age Curve has a single message that is so powerful, it bears telling and re-telling in myriad forms. Read more...


execution

The Execution Premium: Linking Strategy to Operations for Competitive Advantage

By Robert S. Kaplan and David P. Norton
Harvard Business School Press, 2008

Reviewed by John Oppenheim, Adjunct Professor of Management Information Systems

4stars

According to the authors, the "execution premium" is the value and benefits that come from the concepts put forth in their wildly popular first book, The Balanced Scorecard. Read more...


nonverbal

The Nonverbal Advantage: The Secrets and Science of Body Language at Work

By Carol Kinsey Goman
Berrett-Koehlers, 2008

Reviewed by Paul Gift, PhD, Assistant Professor of Economics

3stars

The author emphasizes five C's for deciphering the real meanings behind nonverbal signals: context, clusters, congruence, consistency, and culture. Read more...


trillion

The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash

By Charles R. Morris
Public Affairs, 2008

Reviewed by John J. Scully, PhD, CPA, Practitioner Faculty of Accounting and Finance

3stars

Author Charles Morris offers several interesting insights into the origins of the U.S. credit market meltdown. Read more...



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The opinions expressed are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Graziadio School of Business and Management nor Pepperdine University.