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Hardcover Think Big, ACT Small: How America's Best Performing Companies Keep the Start-Up Spirit Alive Book

ISBN: 1591840767

ISBN13: 9781591840763

Think Big, ACT Small: How America's Best Performing Companies Keep the Start-Up Spirit Alive

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Book Overview

Acclaimed management guru Jason Jennings and his research team screened more than 100,000 companies to find nine that have increased revenues and profits by 10% or more for 10 consecutive years. After... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Stunningly Useful for Growing Businesses

We recommend this book to all companies dealing with growth. If your business is content with staying small, skip it. Read this book if you are in a growing business or in one that lost its way while it expanded. The final quiz section, where author Jason Jennings walks you through a series of exercises to identify where your business falls in his rubric, is not so impressive. Skim it. Everything else in the book is stunningly useful. Jennings and his staff did a lot of research, including both statistical analysis and first-person interviews. They also reflected seriously on the sorts of businesses they should hold up as models for others to follow. These model businesses operate in fields ranging from fast food (SONIC) to sports outfitting (Cabela's). Some of these enterprises - such as Strayer University, the higher education representative - initially seem too specialized to provide generalizable lessons, but Jennings succeeds in making them relevant. The result is a book that is entertaining and convincing, if not always easy to follow. After all, Jennings wants you to become proficient at business fundamentals, an asset which is, as he notes, both rare and difficult.

Another Masterful Job telling how it is in the world of the Best

Jason has done it again! If you want to know what the best companies in the world do to be exactly that, THE BEST, this book is a must read. Success leaves clues and Jason has done a masterful job of giving you an inside look at the companies setting the standards for the world of business. There are very few "good" business books and even fewer "great" ones. This one is destined to be of the latter. If you are interested in business, own a business or hope to someday, this book and its wisdom need to be part of your library.

What I REALLY thought of this book

If you read McCormack's "What They Don't Teach You at Harvard Business School", or Finkelstein's "Why Smart Executives Fail", prepare to feel slightly uncomfortable: Think Big Act Small shows they didn't go far enough! I have read stacks of these books: some good, others downright daft. With or without a Degree or MBA, this latest offering from Jennings works. It cuts to the heart of the matter - no nonsense, no pretence. It is not preaching some new fandango concept that will be laughed out of existence in 2 or 3 years time. This book deals with reality and not wild academic end of the spectrum silliness. There is nothing in Think Big Act Small that I did not appreciate and cannot instil into my own company. The first thing that strikes you is the books layout. In today's busy world, the last thing you need is some idiot dropping a 900-page masterpiece in your lap: NOT the case here. The book is well laid out and the writing style instantly invites you to dive in - but beware: it's LOADED! Everything has been distilled, concentrated...add water (read slowly and/or more than once). Think Big Act Small has one of the most intriguing introductions I have ever read. The book is written in plain English and offers highly practical and realistic advice. Thankfully, it has not been written in the condescending "we are the best" preachy style of so many other authors floating around out there. Jennings himself sets out not knowing what the answers are. For him, and the reader, it is a journey rich with discovery and it is so easy to tag along with him as he goes (in fact, you'll find yourself trying to overtake him and get to the answers first). The opening chapters might easily have been called "a collection of odd-balls". After taking time out to remember that this is what Jennings discovered and not what he set out to impart, the true amazement experienced by him becomes instantly contagious. The book deals with companies silently outperforming the Goliaths of their industries, even during tough years. So, if they can do it, why can't you or I? Think Big Act Small demonstrates we can and without throwing the baby out with the bathwater! Jennings clearly has the golden touch: that amazing ability to point to what most of us miss but without indulging in jargon, technical language or condescending tones. He demonstrates quite clearly that common sense is not at all common. Think Big Act Small is a keeper - not some coffee table book to be read and discarded. Time and time again I found myself staring off into the distance as the book revealed undiscovered truths about my own company. This is a book for continual reference. Any change of mood, perspective or circumstances led to me picking it up again and viewing various chapters in a new light. As we sometimes say here in Ireland: this book would be "cheap at twice the price!" Alarmingly, colleges are NOT teaching what Jennings has discovered. My views: BUY it, READ it, KEEP it and KEEP GOING B

A MUST read for anyone in ANY business

Think Big, Act Small is one of the best business books I have read this year. Even though it has not been around for 20 years, I consider this book to be a "classic" on par with Think and Grow Rich and How to Win Friends and Influence people. This is not a book you read and leave, this book provides great insights on success fundamentals and serves as a tool to you evaluate your business and improve it "real-time". It helps you reverse engineer your business to be successful. You can implement the 10 principles starting with the Assembly lines all the way to the Customer. This book is simply a "must read" for anyone serious about achieving maximum results in their business life. I have really benefited and hope you will too!

Jennings' Most Important Book...Thus Far

Jennings' highly innovative, at times refreshingly unorthodox thinking was evident in his previously published books, It's Not the Big That Eat the Small...It's the Fast That Eat the Slow (co-authored with Laurence Haughton) and then Less Is More: How Great Companies Use Productivity As a Competitive Tool in Business. As I read this volume, I was reminded of at least some of the material in Sun Tzu's The Art of War and, especially, the strategies recommended in a section called "Estimates" in Samuel B. Griffith's superb translation. For example: "All warfare is based on deception. Therefore, when capable, feign incapacity; when active, inactivity. When near, make it appear that you are far away; when far away, that you are near. Offer the enemy a bait to lure him; feign disorder and strike him. When he concentrates, prepare against him; where he is strong, avoid him. Pretend inferiority and encourage his arrogance. When he is united, divide him. Attack when he is unprepared; sally out when he does not expect you." You get the idea. Jennings is a staunch and eloquent advocate of this principle: Do much more and do it much better, faster, and do it with less. OK, but how? The answer to that question was revealed by rigorous and extensive research which he and his two associates (Brian Solon and Greg Powell) conducted. They began with 70,000 companies as candidates for designation as the best performing companies in the U.S. Among all of them, which have increased their revenue and profits by at least 10% for ten years or longer? Only nine qualified: Cabela's, Dot Foods, Koch Industries, Medline Industries, O'Reilly Automotive, PETCO Animal Supplies, SAS Institute, Sonic Drive-in, and Strayer Education. Back to "How?" Jennings identifies ten "Building Blocks" which, in combination, explain why each of those in an obviously mixed bag of companies has been and continues to be a best performer (i.e. among the top one-hundredth of 1% of all U.S. companies). It would be a disservice to both Jennings and to those who read this brief commentary to list them and then comment on each out of the context within which Jennings so skillfully presents them. Suffice to say that all organizations (regardless of their size or nature) need to have all ten Building Blocks as a core foundation on which to increase their revenue and profits by at least 10% and then continue to do so year after year after year. How revealing that the CEOs whom Jennings and his research associates interviewed indicate little (if any) interest in any of Sun Tzu's deception strategies...nor in what their competitors are up to, for that matter. They seem wholly preoccupied with sticking to their own "knitting," focusing on what their companies can do best, how to do it even better, and thereby deliver even greater value to their customers. Also, each seems determined to nourish and enhance the quality of life as well as standard of living of everyone involved in the enterprise. This i
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