New Release Tuesdays – November 15, 2011

Published on
November 16, 2011
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Zen to Done: The Ultimate Simple Productivity System
by Leo Babauta and Fred Stella

Zen To Done is a system that is at once simple, and powerful. It will help you develop powerful habits: * how to organize tasks and projects to keep your workday simple and structured * how to keep your desk and email inbox clean and clear *how to focus what you need to do without distraction. This book was written for those who want to get their lives organized and actually execute the things on their to-do list by changing existing habits.

Winning Investors Over: Surprising Truths About Honesty, Earnings Guidance, and Other Ways to Boost Your Stock Price
by Baruch Lev

In Winning Investors Over, Baruch Lev draws on his own and other finance scholars’ research to present authoritative, often surprising instructions for dealing intelligently with Wall Street—and boosting your company’s earnings and stock price.

What’s the Economy For, Anyway?: Why It’s Time to Stop Chasing Growth and Start Pursuing Happiness
by John de Graaf and David Batker

Beginning by shattering our fetish for GDP, What’s the Economy For, Anyway? offers a fresh perspective on quality of life, health, security, work-life balance, leisure, social justice, and perhaps most important, sustainability.

Up Your Sales in a Down Market: 20 Strategies From Top Performing Salespeople to Win Over Cautious Customers
by Ron Volper

As a successful entrepreneur and sales executive with three decades in business, Ron has written an easy-to-follow, hands-on guide that will help sales rookies, struggling reps, and even top performing salespeople boost their company’s revenues faster than they thought possible.

Train Your Brain to Get Rich: The Simple Program That Primes Your Gray Cells for Wealth, Prosperity, and Financial Security
by Teresa Aubele PhD

In Train Your Brain to Get Rich, readers leverage the latest brain research to learn how the rich think—and program their own little grey cells to think in more prosperous ways themselves.

The Real Truth About Social Media
by Eric Harr

Filled with the latest research, actionable insights, case studies, valuable templates, and simple tips, The Real Truth will save you time, boost your business, and enrich your life.

Management by Fable
by MS Stephen Hiss

Aesop’s Fables are known around the world for the valuable lessons they teach about life and human nature. These simple stories have survived for thousands of years because as much as the world around us has changed, the basics of human nature have not.

Innovation and Entrepreneurship: From the Idea to the Organization
by Alain Bloch and Sophie Morin-Delerm

Innovation and entrepreneurship topics are of interest to business executives, managers, consultants, professors, researchers, politicians, citizens, and it is essential that all understand the issues. It is important in our responses to crises, whether economic, financial, environmental, or more generally societal, which are accompanied by quick changes that we use what we know about innovation and entrepreneurship.

30 Days to Online PR & Marketing Success: The 30 Day Results Guide to Making the Most of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Blogging to Grab Headlines and Get Clients
by Gail Martin

Google and the Internet have changed how the PR game is played–and created an explosion of blogs, Websites, and social media platforms with an insatiable need for news. Small companies can create global visibility for their products on a pennies-a-day budget with online PR and Internet marketing–If they know the tricks of the trade.

The Price of Fish: A New Approach to Wicked Economics and Better Decisions
by Ian Harris and Michael Mainelli

In The Price of Fish Michael Mainelli and Ian Harris examine in a unique way the world s most abiding and wicked problems sustainability, global warming, over-fishing, overpopulation, the pensions crisis; all of which are characterized by a set of messy, circular, aggressive and peculiarly long-term problems and go on to suggest that it is not the circumstances that are too complex, but our way of reading them that is too simple.