10 Books That Helped Me Build a Scalable Business
I’m not a big fan of business books that purport to give you everything you need to succeed as there’s a fair sprinkling of survivorship bias in these books. But synthesizing ideas that resonate with you can save you time by learning from others.
Business books I don’t like
First of all… Shoe Dog often appears on these lists but it’s an autobiography - not a business book - and it’s about a boomer apparently drifting through lucky breaks… as a millennial, it is impossible to relate to and as a business person has no practical use. Having said that, I only read the first 100 pages.
Robert Kiyosaki I find morally contemptible, there's probably some decent advice for becoming a land baron in Rich Dad Poor Dad but a world full of Robert Kiyosaki's would be dark place.
Also you often see Start with Why mentioned in these lists - this is a book for executives that want an epiphany and a catchy idea. It massively simplifies Apple’s success into an easily packaged concept that is more useful to the author’s speaking and consulting career than it is to anyone else.
Peter Thiel’s Zero to One I liked but is more aimed at VC-backed ‘disruptive’ startups looking for unicorn exits and I haven’t run one of those (see why), I have only invested in them.
Books I do like
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and How to Win Friends & Influence People were important books to me because my Dad made me read them at a young age. I haven’t read them since (though I plan to) but it had a big effect on me not just being an “effective” person but also a good person, I hope.
For anyone running a company or seeking to be a more effective operator, read these and learn on the job and you’re good.
Eric Ries’ classic on how to build a new business that is lean enough to last until product/market fit, essential for anyone with a young (especially pre-revenue) business with a new offering.
The original take on how to work ‘on’ your business and not in it, I recommend to anyone running a business of any size. The idea that you have to improve your process and structure so that your business thrives without you is drummed in steadily throughout.
This one is agency-specific but plenty of general lessons that can be applied generally.
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If I started a business again I would use this ‘operating system’ in its entirety, which lays out how meetings should work, company structure, strategy is communicated etc. Quote: Above all else, your leaders need to be able to simplify, delegate, predict, systemize, and structure.
Similar to EOS… I wish I’d read this book before I became a CEO, rather than having had to learn it all through hard experience. Matt Mochary uses his extensive career and role as CEO coach to summarise tactically how to be an effective CEO, but I think anyone managing a team can learn from this pithy book.
The original introduction to OKRs, which are an effective way to communicate and deliver on strategic initiatives. OKRs are used by most tech companies you know and respect.
This is my all time fave book on management, I love the caustic tone and it has some of the most down to earth advice I’ve ever seen. Recommended to me by JML when he was CTO at Shopify, it definitely has a software engineering angle but again the advice is invaluable to any manager and will save you from learning some lessons the hard way.
Anti fragile by NNT (and also?The Black Swan)
Nassim Nicholas Taleb was a pivotal influence on my thinking. It sounds abstract… but his statistical observations on the world will help you understand how complex systems like the economy (and your business) work. His thinking helped me understand the Global Financial Crisis and the nature of the world we live in. Anti-fragile is a sort of manifesto on making systems that are flexible enough to absorb chaos. Be warned the tone is a bit like being stuck at a hotel bar with a drunk professor.
More than a book about habits… more a book about being more effective as a person, including as an operator.
I was torn on which book to put last on this list but I chose Ray Dalio’s principles, partly because I do like a lot of his philosophies (though at times it makes the firm he founded sound like a cult) but also because I think he neatly touches on some good rules for life, as someone who has obviously experienced a lot. The death of his son in an accident at the start of 2021 really shocked me and I truly hope that Ray and his family were able to get through it, his book certainly suggests he’s a man of great fortitude.
OK that’s it - hit me up with your recs.
Growth Marketing Lead at Oliver Bonas
2 年Thanks Alex. So impressive. I’ve just started reading Working Backwatds which aims to share the ‘secret sauce’ behind Amazon’s success. I’ll let you know when I’ve made my first billion!
Commercial @ Underwaterpistol
2 年We can't forget Skin in the Game. Risk reward symmetry is exactly the authenticity we need in this post-Covid world.
Facilitator & Public Speaking Trainer | Community & Growth Strategist | Curator of Conversations That Matter | Event MC | Program & Partnership Builder | Lover of Unicorns, Sarcasm & Genmaicha
2 年LOVE that list!
Certified Conversion Rate Optimizer & Conversion Copywriter
2 年This is for creative service providers, but it's my favourite: The Win Without Pitching Manifesto by Blair Enns.
Director, Business Development (US & Canada) at Indotronix Avani Group
2 年Atomic Habits is one of my all-time favourites -- Would also highly recommend Can't Hurt Me by David Goggins... easily one of the most impactful books I've ever read ??