An (informal) Entrepreneurial Brainstorming Session No. 1: Book summaries that are stories
I know I wrote about rebooting the entrepreneurial brainstorming sessions. I kind of prefer an informal style of ‘idea generation’ though… Today, the subject is literature, of which there arguably is way too much. Sometimes it’s nice to read a ‘thin book,’ like The One Minute Manager or even The Alchemist.
What those books have in common is that they give you lessons in a very compressed space. But it works, because rather than doing a dry, point-by-point summary of the content published in much longer books, they do so in story-format. The One Minute Manager is about a man trying to learn about management and he goes on a kind of exploratory adventure to uncover the secrets. According to the book there’s only really three elements to effective one-to-one management [there's another book in the series, I'm reading now, on one-to-many management also], but I won’t bore you with them. The only thing to note is that I REMEMBER the lessons in the book perfectly!
The Alchemist is not a management book, it’s a self-help book about finding happiness and the meaning to your life. It’s again about an adventure and you follow this kid across the desert. Very simple principles, clothed in the format of an entertaining and exciting story.
No wonder these two books are best-sellers!
These last decades have seen a tremendous rise on various fronts involving the mass-education of mankind. From MBAs, to millions of published books, to billions of informational websites, it’s understandably overwhelming. As a result, you now get books teaching you (supposedly) “MBAs in a nutshell”, you get websites that sell you books in audio-format. And you also get websites that sell you book summaries for the busy executive.
Having read several of these, I have to say that I’m not impressed. Sure, I can read Crossing the Chasm in 5 pages, but what have I actually learned? How do the lessons that I read in bullet-point format translate into a language that my brain understands and remembers?
The answer is, if you ask me, to start a business that translates (boring / long) books into shorter books and doing so in story-form. Nothing is as exciting to business-folk like me, than reading a Harvard Business Review case-study. Because, it’s a (nearly) living example. I place myself into the antagonist’s point of view and learn about the challenges he/she has to face!
So this is my first “entrepreneurial brainstorming” topic: start a business that translates longer books into shorter entertaining stories and sells them to executives!
What do you think?
Vincent
Related posts:
- Entrepreneurial brainstorming session #15: an online payment feature for bloggers (eCommerce)
- Entrepreneurial brainstorming session #14: an online party planning software
- Rebooting entrepreneurial brainstorming sessions: what elements should they contain?
- Entrepreneurial Brainstorming session N.6: a Geek squad aimed at managing your self-image on the Internet
- Entrepreneurial Brainstorming session N.5: NoHasslE-commerce.com, a C-to-C operations outsourcing solution
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I think it can make some money but the best case study is definitely experience. Every case study in the world, be it Harvard or whatever business school textbook, will never match getting your hands dirty building success.. or failure. In other words, rather than reading books or taking an MBA, if you’re really about changing the World, start changing it!
Spoken like a true salesman / entrepreneur where nothing matters more than your effort.