SURGING AHEAD BRILLIANTLY
Using Time Tested Ideas of the 20th Century's Best Business Gurus
by
Book Details
About the Book
If you are bored with or stymied by a routine job, or you are currently trying to flood the market with your resume, you will appreciate this book's scope, compactness and future- orientation. On the other hand, if you are an emerging adult or a teacher who wants to know more about business itself, you may pick up some tricks of the business trade here from the best and brightest businessmen of the last half-century and from me. Or maybe you are a corporate officer who has long been claiming people are woefully unprepared for work, or an executive who prides himself on wanting to know everything about business, or just a caring relative looking for something to help out a young student. Then you will appreciate this sweeping survey's candor and insights. Surging Ahead Brilliantly details Five Essential Survival Skills and five auxiliary topics for this century, imparts a wealth of practical ideas, helps the reader capitalize on my many years' experience, and surveys 30 books by the best futuristic thinkers of the last century. It is a comprehensive but simple guide to what goes on in business, what it is about, and where it is going.
About the Author
My life has been an eclectic kaleidoscope of unrelated activities, all centered around an adventurous nature and the fact I could read and write. Besides a life-long love affair with the English language, I'm also crazy about ideas per se, since taking them in and mulling them over is one of the few vices that doesn't harm the body tissues. That's how I came to collect the ideas in this book.
Quite recently while checking its galleys I came across an article titled What We Don't Teach that stated, "Across the nation, school districts are, for the most part, failing to teach kids capitalism, the economic system that governs virtually every aspect of the world in which they live. Shame on us."* That's when I realized this book could best be described as my attempt to fill that void.
*February 2003, The Desert Leaf's Column of Opinion, by Arthur Jacobson.