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[休闲其它] 2012经管好书推荐盘点   [推广有奖]

171
晓紫樱 发表于 2013-1-2 18:39:56
推荐《第三次工业革命》杰里米·里夫金
第一次工业革命使19世纪的世界发生了翻天覆地的变化

第二次工业革命为20世纪的人们开创了新世界

第三次工业革命同样也将在21世纪从根本上改变人们的生活和工作

在这本书中,作者为我们描绘了一个宏伟的蓝图:数亿计的人们将在自己家里、办公室里、工厂里生产出自己的绿色能源,并在“能源互联网”上与大家分享,这就好像现在我们在网上发布、分享消息一样。能源民主化将从根本上重塑人际关系,它将影响我们如何做生意,如何管理社会,如何教育子女和如何生活。

我们正处于第二次工业革命和石油世纪的最后阶段。这是一个令人难以接受的严峻现实,因为这一现实将迫使人类迅速过渡到一个全新的能源体制和工业模式。否则,人类文明就有消失的危险。

作者敏锐地发现,历史上数次重大的经济革命都是在新的通讯技术和新的能源系统结合之际发生的。新的通讯技术和新的能源系统结合将再次出现。

这本书为我们描绘了世界经济未来的发展方向,也给我们指明了走出经济危机的道路。
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172
987382055 发表于 2013-1-2 18:55:11
推荐《价值——公司金融的四大基石》,电子工业出版社。
理由:这本书的作者都是麦肯锡的高管,主要讲公司金融的四大基石以及它们如何与实体经济和股市综合运用以创造价值。本书认为公司金融的四大基石是高管制定公司战略、并购、预算等决策的基本思路和原则,而忽视这四大基石可能导致破坏公司价值的决策或彻底性的灾难。写得还是比较容易理解的,可以学习一下麦肯锡的思维方式。
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173
987382055 发表于 2013-1-2 18:55:34
推荐《价值——公司金融的四大基石》,电子工业出版社。
理由:这本书的作者都是麦肯锡的高管,主要讲公司金融的四大基石以及它们如何与实体经济和股市综合运用以创造价值。本书认为公司金融的四大基石是高管制定公司战略、并购、预算等决策的基本思路和原则,而忽视这四大基石可能导致破坏公司价值的决策或彻底性的灾难。写得还是比较容易理解的,可以学习一下麦肯锡的思维方式。

174
小白马叫Lynn 发表于 2013-1-2 18:57:14
推荐北大经济学教授汪丁丁的《未来八年,我们该如何做》:出版社:中央广播电视大学出版社,版本,2012年5月第一次印刷。
推荐理由:汪丁丁教授以他的学养深思和家国情怀,和年轻人探讨中国未来的社会图景,也就他长期关注的政治家品格、制度建设、医疗与养老、环保】劳动力工资以及人类社会过程等诸多问题,提出他的见解、批评与建设性意见,只为期待中国与中国人更加美好的未来。
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175
爱上轻舟 发表于 2013-1-2 19:36:41
《伟大的中国经济转型》,本书集结了45位国际顶尖的中国经济专家论文,他们从20个不同领域展示了中国如何将政治制度、产业发展、全球化、区域资源配置和局部改革等错综复杂的因素结合起来,造就了一个令人惊叹和前所未有的发展“奇迹”。这些作者均具有丰富的中国经验,且来自不同的学科背景,因而从不同角度解释了中国经济高速增长和制度缺陷并存的原因,对深刻理解中国 经济增长的过去、现在与未来有很大的裨益。

176
vanhongbin 发表于 2013-1-2 20:42:49
失去的二十年:日本经济长期停滞的真正原因。
作   者:(日)池田信夫 著
推荐理由:日本已经陷入了连续二十年的经济停滞状态,史称“失去的二十年”。这段历史引起了各国尤其是中国的高度重视。虽然研究者众,但缺少对日本社会真实的了解,更多的是臆测和猜想。而日本自身的反思声音很少被引入。 《失去的二十年:日本经济长期停滞的真正原因》正是填补了这一空白。读者可以看到日本人是如何清晰解读其来龙去脉的。作者其经济学家兼媒体人的双重身份更是赋予本书独特的洞见,他从日本的现状、历史、经济学角度出发,颠覆了世界对日本经济的很多传统看法。是一本对当下中国经济有借鉴意义的书。
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177
shelzhou 发表于 2013-1-2 21:21:23
林毅夫的《解读中国经济》。(北京大学出版社, 出版时间为2012年9月)林毅夫以其独到的见解分析处于转轨时期的中国,以较为客观的态度分析当前中国所面临的问题,值得一看。
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178
muddling 发表于 2013-1-2 21:39:03
转帖 : http://bobsutton.typepad.com/

11 Books Every Leader Should Read:Updated for 2012

I first posted this last December, but I thought that it would be fun to update it for 2012.  Note I have removed two from last years list: Men and Women of the Corporation and Who Says that Elephants Can't Dance?  They are both great books, but I am trying to stick to 11 books and the two new ones below edge them out. Here goes:

I was looking through the books on Amazon to find something that struck my fancy, and instead, I started thinking about the books that have taught me much about people, teams, and organizations -- while at the same time -- provide useful guidance (if sometimes only indirectly) about what it takes to lead well versus badly.  The 11 books below are the result.

Most are research based, and none are a quick read (except for Orbiting the Giant Hairball). I guess this reflects my bias.  I like books that have real substance beneath them.  This runs counter the belief in the business book world at the moment that all books have to be both short and simple.  So, if your kind of business book is The One Minute Manager (which frankly, I like too... but you can read the whole thing in 20 or 30 minutes), then you probably won't like most of these books at all.

1. The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer.  A masterpiece of evidence-based management -- the strongest argument I know that "the big things are the little things."

2. Influence by Robert Cialdini the now classic book about how to persuade people to do things, how to defend against persuasion attempts, and the underlying evidence.  I have been using this in class at Stanford for over 20 years, and I have had dozens of students say to me years later "I don't remember much else about the class, but I still use and think about that Cialdini book."

3.Made to Stick Chip and Dan Heath.  A modern masterpiece,  the definition of an instant classic.  How to design ideas that people will remember and act on.   I still look at it a couple times a month and I buy two or three copies at a time because people are always borrowing it from me.  I often tell them to keep it because they rarely give it back anyway.

4. Thinking, Fast and Slow Daniel Kahneman.  Even though the guy won the Nobel Prize, this book is surprisingly readable.  A book about how we humans really think, and although it isn't designed to do this, Kahneman also shows how much of the stuff you read in the business press is crap.

5. Collaboration by Morten Hansen.  He has that hot bestseller now with Jim Collins called Great By Choice, which I need to read. This is a book I have read three times and is -- by far -- the best book ever written about what it takes to build an organization where people share information, cooperate, and help each other succeed.

6. Orbiting the Giant Hairball by Gordon MacKenzie.  It is hard to explain, sort of like trying to tell a stranger about rock and roll as the old song goes.  But it is the best creativity book ever written, possibly the business book related to business ever written.  Gordon's voice and love creativity and self-expression -- and how to make it happen despite the obstacles that unwittingly heartless organizations put in the way -- make this book a joy.

7. The Pixar Touch by David Price.  After reading this book, my main conclusion was that it seems impossible that Pixar exists. Read how Ed Catmull along with other amazing characters-- after amazing setbacks, weird moments, and one strange twist after another -- realized Ed's dream after working on it for decades.  Ed is working on his own book right now, I can hardly wait to see that.  When I think of Ed and so many others I have met at Pixar like Brad Bird, I know it is possible to be a creative person without being an asshole.  In fact, at least if the gossip I keep hearing from Pixar people is true, Jobs was rarely rude or obnoxious in his dealings with people at Pixar because he knew they knew more than him -- and even he was infected by Pixar's norm of civility.

8. The Laws of Subtraction by Matthew May.   This 2012 book has more great ideas about how to get rid of what you don't need and how to keep -- and add -- what you do need than any book ever written.  Matt has as engaging a writing style as I have ever encountered and he uses it to teach one great principle after another, from "what isn't there can trump what is" to "doing something isn't always better than doing nothing."  Then each principle is followed with five or six very short -- and well-edited pieces -- from renowned and interesting people of all kinds ranging from executives, to researchers, to artists.  It is as fun and useful as non-fiction book can be and is useful for designing every part of your life, not just workplaces.

9. Leading Teams by J. Richard Hackman.  When it comes to the topic of groups or teams, there is Hackman and there is everyone else.   If you want a light feel good romp that isn't very evidence-based, read The Wisdom of Teams.  If want to know how teams really work and what it really takes to build, sustain, and lead them from a man who has been immersed in the problem as a researcher, coach, consultant, and designer for over 40 years, this is the book for you.

10. Give and Take by Adam Grant.  This book won't be out for a few months, but you should pre-order it so you don't forget. Adam is the hottest organizational researcher of his generation.  When I read the pre-publication version, I was so blown away by how useful, important, and interesting that Give and Take was that I gave it the most enthusiastic blurb of my life: “Give and Take just might be the most important book of this young century. As insightful and entertaining as Malcolm Gladwell at his best, this book has profound implications for how we manage our careers, deal with our friends and relatives, raise our children, and design our institutions. This gem is a joy to read, and it shatters the myth that greed is the path to success."  In other words, Adam shows how and why you don't need to be a selfish asshole to succeed in this life. America -- and the world -- would be a better place if all of memorized and applied Adam's worldview.

11. The Path Between the Seas by historian David McCullough. On building the Panama Canal.  This is a great story of how creativity happens at a really big scale. It is messy. Things go wrong. People get hurt. But they also triumph and do astounding things.  I also like this book because it is the antidote to those who believe that great innovations all come from start-ups and little companies (although there are some wild examples of entrepreneurship in the story -- especially the French guy who designs Panama's revolution -- including a new flag and declaration of independence as I recall -- from his suite in the Waldorf Astoria in New York, and successfully sells the idea to Teddy Roosevelt ).  As my Stanford colleague Jim Adams points out, the Panama Canal, the Pyramids, and putting a man on moon are just a few examples of great human innovations that were led by governments.  

I would love to know of your favorites -- and if want a systematic approach to this question, don't forget The 100 Best Business Books of All Time.

P.S. Also, for self-defense, I recommend that we all read Isaacson's Steve Jobs -- I keep going places -- cocktail parties, family gatherings, talks I give and attend, and even the grocery store where people start talking about it and especially arguing about it.  As I explained in Wired and Good Boss, Bad Boss I have come to believe that whatever Jobs was in life, in death he has become a Rorschach test -- we all just project our beliefs and values on him.

179
君静思 发表于 2013-1-2 22:12:57
推荐大前研一的《欧盟的冲击》
主要介绍了欧盟近十年的表现(主要内容)和全球经济趋势变化,可以了解世界的经济格局,让我们在后金融危机时代把握好方向
大前研一是麦肯锡日本分公司董事长,“全球五位管理大师”之一,“日本战略之父”。
还有一本《M型社会》,说美国和日本,也不错,但是是12年之前的
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180
luchaoqun 发表于 2013-1-2 22:58:35
<避开股市的地雷>张化侨

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