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Category: Business

Review: How To Make Real Money Selling Books by Brian Jud

[ 4 ] June 10, 2011

Reviewed by Leigh Adamkiewicz

I met one of my favorite English teachers during my freshman year. He was a dashing young man, with a delightfully twisted sense of humor – and an absolute disinterest in keeping the noise down in his classroom. Only one thing kept the class from becoming a free-for-all. Our textbook. Each entry level English class had to study from the same painfully comprehensive textbook. To ignore it meant you would fail the class. But to read a couple chapters in a row would leave you a drooling wreck. The subject matter was so incredably dense I heard of students dropping classes because they didn’t want to have to deal with it.

But my teacher had a solution. Trashy reality TV. No, really. He recommended watching our favorite trashy, brainless reality TV show and reading as much of the assigned chapter as we could during each commercial breaks. One would act as a palate cleanser for another, and using them both together we could actually comprehend the info that would aid us the rest of our academic careers.

There are some who say college is an expensive babysitting service and that the students don’t retain the lessons they learn there in the long term. But I would have never gotten through the introduction of How to Make Real Money Selling Books without using that advice.

Non-fiction writing is, by definition, usually dry and precise. Especially when it is instructional. And the author, Brian Jud, is not a writer by trade. Which is why the first few pages of this book are as dry as a saltine cracker. When regular readers pick up this kind of a guide, they usually skip such parts. Those of us doing reviews for the books are not so lucky.

However, thankfully, How to Make Real Money Selling Books doesn’t stay dry and tasteless for long. Once you struggle past that dry outer layer of business lingo (I actually cringed at the use of the word ‘paradigm’), you quickly realize you are in a remarkably complex guide that is invaluable to any writer.

Jud knows about literary marketing. He has decades of experience under his belt and leads a consulting firm that exclusively deals with marketing books. And he uses all those years of experience to show you how to sell your book in ways you may have never thought of before.

And that doesn’t mean he gives you the new tried-and-true method to find an agent and assume everything will be OK. There’s no ‘one day boys and girls, your publishing house will come and you’ll all live happily ever after’ fairy tale here. And it’s not just a list of some basic tips to help you build a professional website or throw together a business plan.

This book is a staggering in-depth analysis of all the smaller markets, submarkets, and untapped niches that often go overlooked. It will show you how to work a reading tour, stock a booth at a convention, and wheel and deal in any negotiation. It will show you how to test market before you attempt a riskier investment choice and how to determine which one of your risks will pay off before you put serious captial into them.

And the resources. The resources! The twenty page resource guide alone is a fantastic source of leads, hints, and inspiration. I can’t even count the number of times I said, “Wow!” or “That’s IT!” or “why don’t more people try that?” while reading this book. The further I went into this book the more I kept asking why weren’t more people talking about it. Even if the prose was dry, the sheer bulk of useful and inspiring knowledge in this book is simply overwhelming.

If you are dreaming about publishing a novel – or lying in the aftermath of a bad publishing experience – this should be required reading. Hell, they should have it on book lists for English majors from their sophomore years forward. The dry nature of the text can put some people off, but instructions to a rocket ship aren’t supposed to be a page-turner. Check out the table of contents, find the chapter that deals with the questions you’ve been asking yourself and start from there. You’ll be astonished, grateful, and ready to recommend this book to a friend by the time you’re done.

Rating: 4/5

Leigh is a fearless writer who never met a genre, subject, or format she didn’t like. She has written professionally for the past six years and enjoys biking, exploring odd corners of Northeast Ohio, and discovering those good books she hasn’t read yet.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by Square One Publishers. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: Grow the Entrepreneurial Dream by Jim Houtz

[ 3 ] May 22, 2011

Reviewed by Jodi Horsley

If you are starting up a business and want a book that will walk you through every step in the process, – from the vision to the board of directors – then Grow the Entrepreneurial Dream by Jim Houtz is definitely one you most read.

Grow the Entrepreneurial Dream is broken down in to three sections – Foundation, Growth Strategies and Looking Ahead. Foundation covers the area of vision. Growth Strategies includes market evaluation, growth management, growth marketing and operational excellence. Looking Ahead covers the areas of going public or staying private and why businesses fail. The book also includes an entire chapter on integrity, both personal and professional.  Houtz also discusses the importance of ongoing employee training, and developing not only loyal customers but a continuous growth of loyal customers. Throughout the book he stresses the right ways to do things, and backs up his advice with solid reasoning.

Houtz is a very successful entrepreneur who writes from experience. He started a business with $1500 and 10 shares of IBM stock. Years later he sold the company for a whopping $270 million. This book is a great tool not only for those who have a vision and don’t really know what step to take next, but also for those who are already have a successful business. Grow the Entrepreneurial Dream could give insight on how to continue on a successful growth path or how to get out of a stagnant one.

Grow the Entrepreneurial Dream is genuinely a great book for those who are looking to build a successful large business. If you are a person who is more in the business of an MLM or Network Marketing, then this book would probably not be of benefit to you.

Rating: 5/5

Jodi lives in the western suburbs of Illinois with her husband, her elementary school daughter, and preschool boy/girl twins. She is an avid reader and loves losing herself in a good book. She has a Master’s in Information Technology and has been a WAHM mom for 4 years now.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by Planned Television Arts. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: Merchants of Deception by Eric Scheibeler

[ 4 ] March 26, 2011

Reviewed by Erin McKibbin

There “are many different types of cults. There are religious, political, financial, self improvement, UFO, and other types as well…As different as they all are, most have certain defining characteristics that lump them into the category of a cult.”

In the 1990s, Eric and Patty Scheibeler fell victim to a business cult that has been snaring innocent families for several decades. The indoctrination into the Amway cult financially, emotionally, and spiritually bankrupted this couple whose only intent was to provide a financial and moral backbone for their family. Thanks to the political clout that Amway and Quixtar have had over the United States legislative, judicial, and executive branches of the government, this destructive cult still rends the American dream from licit families to this day.

The Scheibelers rose rather high in the ranks of Amway’s independent distributors (or IBOs) before having to admit that the higher they rose, the more destitute the actually were. Upon breaking away from the decade long brainwashing they suffered at the hands of Amway professionals and its distributorship program, Eric and Patty faced attacks on many fronts. They were sued on just about every trumped up charge that teams and teams of attorneys on Amway’s retainers could dream up. They were bled to the point of bankruptcy and foreclosure. Their reputations were smeared with nefarious glee. They were even threatened bodily harm by fanatics within the organization. Yet, despite these overwhelming odds, the Scheibelers decided that they could not turn a blind eye and just walk away. Their own personal moral code required them to expose the Amway cult for what it is in the hopes of tumbling this evil giant and preventing the defrauding of any other families.

Scheibeler has prevailed against many odds by maintaining his website www.merchantsofdeception.com (when Amway has successfully shut down all other websites through legal action) and by providing his book, Merchants of Deception, for free electronically prior to its print publication. (Note: www.merchantsofdeception.com has been shut down since the publication of the book; the authors’ other website, www.transgallaxys.com was still up as of today)

Through his and others’ efforts, Amway’s stranglehold on the European market has be eliminated and it is only a matter of time before its American protectors (such as George Bush Sr., Newt Gingrich, Oliver North, Zig Ziglar, Robert Schuller, Charles Colson, and Billy Graham to name a few) turn their backs on this megalithic pyramid scheme. Perhaps the dawn of the new decade will bring about justice to the millions bilked by the Amway cult.

Rating: 3/5

Erin fell in love with the written word as a small child and subsequently spent most of her life happily devouring literature. She works as a freelance news, marketing, and technical writer as well as a full-time researcher/investigator in the sign industry. Erin lives just outside of Cleveland, Ohio enjoying the beauty of life with her children and grandchildren.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by Eric Scheibeler. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: The Skinny on Time Management by Jim Randel

[ 4 ] March 6, 2011

Reviewed by Poppy J.

The Skinny on Time Management covers effective time management techniques in a small concise little package. The book is written with still frames, using a stick figure to represent the author as he provides tips on the best ways to manage time.

The book is a quick read and offers advice on determining whether or not you are making an effective use of your time. The book also provides guidance for changing your ways and becoming more conscious about how your time is spent.

If the readers make the suggested charts (as I did), they will be shocked at how the time in a day, week, month or year is really spent!

The Skinny on Time Management uses wit and humor to bring readers a new awareness about how their time is spent. The book provides simple tips  on defining goals, developing road maps to success and making actual changes. There are also several “reality checks” along the way, providing an insightful, accurate and interesting guide.

The most interesting concept for me was that all hours in the day are not alike – in terms of and in regards to determining productivity. Energy must be harnessed and matched to daily productivity time slots. This is a critical feature of becoming naturally more productive in a person’s daily life. I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in a little self discovery regarding how to become more effective in general and how to manage time better in the future.

Check out our review of The Skinny on Success

Rating: 4/5

After a decade of working in several NYC law departments and teaching, Poppy decided she enjoyed writing full-time. She currently works as a freelance writing consultant, and lives with her husband and sons on the East Coast.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by Rand Media Co. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: Fashion Unraveled by Jennifer Matthews

[ 5 ] February 22, 2011

Reviewed by Poppy J.

Fashion Unraveled takes the reader through the back door of the glamorous fashion industry. The book is essentially a step-by-step introduction on how to get started in the business, offering case studies, blank forms and detail sheets, practical guides for discussion, questionnaires, cut sheets, tips on defining a market and couture advice. It also goes over customers, production, design philosophy, press releases, look books, websites and more.

Fashion Unraveled advises the budding fashion designer on how to use the Internet as a marketing tool. The new fashion maven will learn everything there is to know on setting up a fashion blog, what it means to use SEO content, and the best ways to use self promotion to get a foot in the door of the fashion business.

The book goes on to cover a laundry list of the basics of financial information, product safety, regulations, protecting your work product, costs, budgeting and goes over general accounting principles. I particularly enjoyed this section because people new to the fashion industry may assume that it is all about glamour and looking fabulous at all times. But alas, financial projections, break even points and exit strategies are all necessary to understand, implement and develop if a person is truly interested in creating a viable product line.

Fashion Unraveled is a great starter book for anyone serious about fashion.

For more information on Jennifer Matthews and her work, see www.fashionunraveled.com and www.porcelynne.com.

Rating: 5/5

After a decade of working in several NYC law departments and teaching, Poppy decided she enjoyed writing full-time. She currently works as a freelance writing consultant, and lives with her husband and sons on the East Coast.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by East Bay Fashion Resource. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande

[ 5 ] January 12, 2011

Reviewed by Vera (Luxury Reading)

Hundreds of thousands of people die every year from surgeries gone wrong. While surgeries are never truly “routine” and unexpected things do happen, some errors are very preventable.

A surgeon by profession, Atul Gawande was part of the team assembled by the World Health Organization (WHO) to look at the prevalence of surgery errors. They heard accounts from other surgeons – those that operated in high-tech hospitals of the developed countries and others from the developing countries that lacked adequate resources, training, personnel, and so on.

What they found was that errors happened everywhere, and no amount of technology or pharmaceuticals could prevent them. In fact, errors happened most often due to human error, due to routine tasks that were forgotten while focusing on the more complicated problems at hand. This conclusion led to the development of a simple checklist that was then tested at participating hospitals around the world. The results were quite surprising, even to Gawande.

The Checklist Manifesto is Gawande’s account of the development of the surgical checklist, but it’s also so much more. He discusses and compares checklists used by a variety of professionals, from pilots who heavily rely on checklists for safety, to financiers who use checklists to make calculated investment decisions. More importantly, Gawande makes a convincing argument in favor of checklists. Our world is complicated and our skills are getting more and more specialized, causing seemingly unimportant and routine tasks to fall through the cracks. That is where checklists come in.

The Checklist Manifesto has also been a true inspiration, and I have since made checklists for the routine tasks in my life: packing for travel, making professional Power Point presentations, preparing for holidays, etc. Having well thought lists to guide me through these common situations definitely makes my life less stressful – I no longer worry about forgetting to pack a cell phone charger or to buy a gift for a distant aunt!

Rating: 5/5

This book was provided free of any obligation by Picador. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: The Winner’s Brain by Jeff Brown and Mark Fenske

[ 6 ] November 24, 2010

Reviewed by Poppy J.

The Winner’s Brain is a fascinating book that teaches the readers how to harness their personal brain power in an effort to lead a more useful and productive life. The authors discuss finding new ways to motivate ourselves, and to eliminate procrastination in our lives. They suggest mapping out the steps to help us reach our goals, and then focus on how to efficiently work to complete each step. In this way, we will find rewards at each stage of accomplishing long range goals. The book includes tips, pointers, history and scientific explanations on why our brains are only operating on half cylinders.

The Winner’s Brain reviews relationships between how the brain works and the relationship of the whole to the parts. The book also features break out text boxes for added information and real-life examples of increasing efficiency with our brains focused and fresh for any task. Being creative is more than a skill or a “gift,” and the authors discuss how we can find inspiration and allow ourselves the freedom to expand our brain power in work situations and in everyday life.

The reader will be engaged in this book from the beginning to the end. I was fascinated by the wealth of new information; I was being taught about the brain, and was interested to learn more on how to harness my creative side and increase my focus to work “smarter,” not harder. We are a nation of multi-taskers, and this is actually the least effective way to operate during the day. It is much better to focus on one task at a time so that our attention is not divided, delaying our function for decision making. All in all, The Winner’s Brain was an interesting read and I’d recommend this book to anyone.

After a decade of working in several NYC law departments and teaching, Poppy decided she enjoyed writing full-time. She currently works as a freelance writing consultant, and lives with her husband and sons on the East Coast.

Review copy was provided free of any obligation by Phenix & Phenix Literary Publicists. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Review: The Skinny on Success: Why Not You? by Jim Randel

[ 6 ] September 16, 2010

Reviewed by Leigh A.

Everyone should have at least one good inspirational book on their bookshelf. It will get you through tough times by reminding you of the courage of your convictions. It will force you to re-examine the choices you’ve made – not as mistakes but as corrections you might want to make. And, like any good book, it will grab your attention no matter when you decide to pick it up.

And if you’re still searching for that one good book, The Skinny on Success should be your next read. Using a stick-figure couple who want to make their dreams come true, author Jim Randall talks about what it truly means to be successful. And as he quotes studies, research, and real-life examples of success, it becomes clear that the turning point for whether a person is successful is not an innate genius or talent. It’s recognizing the things you love, and are good at, and making the decision to take the time to master those skills.

Even if you aren’t a fan of animation, The Skinny on Success will draw you in. The simple stick figure drawings quickly lock you into the story and keep the reading pace brisk. The Cliffs Notes style not only gets you excited to do more research on your own, but gives suggestions about where to start. My all-time favorite inspirational book What Color is Your Parachute does it for the workings of the job market. The Skinny on Success does it equally well for the workings of the spirit.

The book is admittedly, not perfect. The name-dropping can start to stagger the pace of things. (How does the fact that the author knows actors like Chevy Chase give weight to anecdotes about them?) A revealing personal story about how the author dealt with a seemingly inescapable financial situation will make you [amazonify]0981893597[/amazonify]sympathize with him. Then it will make you wonder why he’s in the business of real estate without a better understanding of small-town politics and the backlash against globalization.

But if these imperfections weren’t there, the book would feel more like a manual and less a friendly chat with a successful business contact. And it’s the connection to real life that hooks the reader.

This book is a message of hope to anyone who has dreamed an impossible dream, or anyone in the process of trying to make their dreams a reality. The Skinny on Success will remain on bookshelves as a source of inspiration for years to come.

Leigh is a fearless writer who never met a genre, subject, or format she didn’t like. She has written professionally for the past six years and enjoys biking, exploring odd corners of Northeast Ohio, and discovering those good books she hasn’t read yet.

This book was provided free of any obligation by RAND Publishing. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

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