Everywhere we go, we find someone is running their business with a great zeal for getting success. However, a great mindset can create many businesses but have you ever thought that what makes a great mindset, and how we can develop it? We almost heard everywhere that 'knowledge is power, and yes it is. Your knowledge is the tool of your great mindset. You can gain knowledge by reading many successful stories or books that will help in developing your mindset.
Here are some of the most readable books that will add knowledge to work on your brain.
Pink reclaims remorse as a motivator at work, in careers, and life in general. The book is peppered with insights about loss, sadness, and missed opportunities gained from large polls of people's biggest regrets, yet it concludes with the hopeful moral that it is nearly never too late to change course.
This is a brief, colorful lesson on the future of labor, which Covid-19 unexpectedly rushed into the present. It's perfectly suited for one of the great post-pandemic arguments. It's too soon to tell which of Hobsbawm's prophecies will come true, but she makes a compelling
an argument for seizing a chance to reimagine the old manner and location of working.
Braun reveals insights about what motivates workers and the essential links with their lives outside the job via a series of case studies based on her work as a consultant and psychologist. The FT reviewer called the book "extraordinary," with "extremely fascinating" insights into workplace friction.
A clear guide to the hazards of strategy based on a climbing metaphor (the "crux" is the most difficult section of a boulder climb). Strategy is a path "through, over, and around a succession of obstacles," argues Rumelt, citing a variety of real-world corporate quandaries to demonstrate how to deal with them.
A highly contemporary and innovative investigation of refugees' exceptional entrepreneurial drive, based on three Syrian case studies. Hanna intertwines the novelistic telling of their tales with a broader perspective of the worldwide refugee issue, which, with the war in Ukraine, has only gotten worse since the book was finished.