If you’ve picked up Sell or Be Sold by Grant Cardone, you’ve already felt that itch. That pull to stop second-guessing your ideas and actually get people on board with them. Whether it’s closing a client, pitching your boss, or convincing your kid to eat broccoli, the game’s the same.
Reading List
The first time you hear someone mention Dianetics, it probably sounds like a made-up word from a sci-fi novel. But then you find out it’s not only real, it’s one of the most talked-about and controversial self-help books ever published. And depending on who you ask, it’s either life-changing or
You know that Sunday night knot in your stomach? The one that shows up just thinking about the next day’s meetings, deadlines, or pointless busywork? The Problems of Work doesn’t ignore that feeling. It names it, unpacks it, and then hands you a toolbox to deal with it instead of
The Science of Scaling doesn’t play games. Most startup advice feels like it’s made for someone else. Someone with ten million in the bank, a full-stack growth team, and a perfect product. It speaks straight to the chaos of those early days when every decision feels like a gamble, every
If you’ve struggled to have social interactions with others perhaps you’ve been missing The Rules of People. Some folks just seem to get people. They walk into a room, say three words, and suddenly everyone’s listening. Meanwhile, the rest of us are trying to remember if we already told that
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap… and Others Don’t isn’t exactly a book you’d find trending on TikTok or sitting on a freshman dorm desk next to protein powder and a PS5 controller. But Jim Collins’ classic business book has a wild amount of wisdom packed in
Starting a business sounds exciting until you’re knee-deep in chaos and “The Hard Thing About Hard Things” starts to feel less like a book and more like your daily planner. Written by Ben Horowitz, this book doesn’t hold your hand or sugarcoat what it’s like to lead a company. It’s
Eric Ries didn’t write The Lean Startup for people who like following manuals. He wrote it for folks who like building new ones. If you’re a founder, rising executive, or just someone who can’t stand wasting time and money on ideas that stall, this one’s worth your eyeballs. It’s not
Starting a business feels exciting, right? But also a little terrifying. You’ve got this idea burning in your head, but now comes the money part. That’s where Rich Dad Poor Dad quietly sneaks into the picture. Not as a rulebook, not as a perfect plan, but as a mindset-changer. If
How The 48 Laws of Power Still Shapes Ambition The 48 Laws of Power opens with a warning. It says those who ignore power games are still part of them, just on the losing side. Written by Robert Greene in the late 1990s, the book has become a modern classic