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
Reading List
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