How To Find The Area Of A Triangle
How To Find The Area Of A Triangle
How to Find the Equation of a Line
How to Find the Area of a Circle
How to Find the Volume of a Sphere
How to Find the Volume of a Sphere
How to Find the Slope of a Line
How to Find the Mean
How to Find the Area of a Rectangle
How To Find The Area of A Parallelogram
Jack Welch once said, "Someone, somewhere has a better idea." In this myth-busting book, the authors reveal that great business ideas do not spring from innate creativity, or necessarily from the brilliant minds of people. Rather, great ideas come to those who are in the habit of looking for great ideas all around them, all the time. Too often, people fall into the trap of thinking that the only worthwhile idea is a thoroughly original one. Idea Hunters know better. They understand that valuable ideas are already out there, waiting to be found - and not just in the usual places.
· Shows how to expand your capacity to find and develop winning business ideas
· Explains why ideas are a critical asset for every manager and professional, not just for those who do "creative"
· Reveals how to seek out and select the ideas that best serve your purposes and goals and define who you are, as a professional
· Offers practical tips on how to master the everyday habits of an Idea Hunter, which include cultivating great conversations
The book is filled with illustrative accounts of successful Idea Hunters and stories from thriving "idea" companies. Warren Buffet, Walt Disney, Thomas Edison, Mary Kay Ash, Twitter, and Pixar Animation Studios are among the many profiled. Amazon.com Exclusive from the Authors: 10 lessons for anyone embarking on the Idea Hunt, the search for ideas that make a difference Co-Author Bill Fischer 6. Understand that failure isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. In fact, you’ll want to build failure into your Hunt for the best ideas, with the prolific use of prototyping (getting your ideas initially into some rough form). The point is to test your ideas as frequently as possible and to learn rapidly, before committing to a product or program. 7. Get the room right. Arrange your physical workspace in ways that will help you collide with and generate useful ideas. For example, store your hot ideas in folders or piles that are visible. Make sure that the books and materials closest at hand are the ones you need for your current projects. 8. Push the Hot Buttons. Link your idea to something that keeps the boss or client up at night. If you can do that, your idea will have a much better chance of getting noticed and winning acceptance. 9. Think compatibility, or “one revolution at a time.” Be ready to explain how your breakthrough idea fits into “the way we do things around here.” An idea that requires too much change in an organization may never see the light of day. 10. Focus on “Try-ability.” Make it easy for people to try out your idea, before buying into it. Think like Apple, which lets people listen to 30-second snippets of music on iTunes before they buy a track or CD. Customers and colleagues are far more likely to sign on if they’re less worried about making a decision they’ll come to regret.
How often do we sit down quietly to proactively focus on idea development? Probably not too often,if at all. But how frequently would we LIKE to do this?
No matter what you do for a living, this book inspires and drives you to be an Idea Hunter. It provides the tools and motivation to look outside the box for ways to enhance your productivity. I've used these techniques not just at work, but in my personal life as well, to search for ideas to help make life a little easier. Buy this book and you'll make your money back the first time you have an epiphany...which probably won't take long.
A friend who knows one of the authors (Andy Boynton) recommended this book to me and I was inititally a little skeptical. In my organization I often feel that we are dealing with too many ideas and the challenge is in picking and choosing. I certainly wasn't in the market for a book that would tell me how to find more ideas. As it turns out, this book was actually quite helpful to me in my situation. It provided a useful framework for how to evaluate ideas and how to decide which ones will be mission critical to our organization and which ones need to be weeded out. I just read "Moonwalking with Einstein" which focuses on "deliberate practice" as a technique for developing expertise in an organization or an individual pursuit. I felt that the Idea Hunter picked up on that theme, in that it does not just give examples of great ideas or idea hunters, but it describes the process that leads to the successful implementation of high impact ideas. Bottom line: The Idea Hunter was... read more
The most important message that I got from this book is that to come up with ideas, you need to have a certain mindset and attitude. That mindset and attitude is one of being in constant search for new and better ways; i.e. become an idea hunter always looking for prey. I agree. This is consistent with Edward de Bono's exhortations that creativity is a skill that can be learned and that can be improved through practice and use. The equivalent from De Bono's techniques is the idea scan, or the habit of periodically observing to note where something may be improved. The purpose of the idea scan is not necessarily to come up with a useful idea, but to develop the habit of looking for ideas. The same can be said for the idea hunter attitude that the authors encourage.
Boynton and Fischer could not help themselves and came up with a suitable acronym to capture their message - Interested Diverse Exercised and Agile. Those are the four traits that characterize an idea... read more
Use coupon below to get discount at eCampus.com!
SHADES
$3 off textbook orders over $75
SUNBLOCK
$4 off textbook orders over $90
SUNSHINE
$5 off textbook orders over $100
Copy the coupon code before clicking the button!
| AVAILABILITY | |||
| Merchant | Format | Price | |
| Amazon US | Paperback | $10.13 - $25.95 | |
| eBooks.com | Digital (PDF) | $25.95 | |
| eCampus | Paperback | ||

A practical introduction to the necessity of competitive intelligence for smarter business decisions-from a leading CI expert and speakerIn Competitive Intelligence Advantage, Seena ...
Everything you need to know about personal finance -- whether you're just starting out or starting over.The hardest part of attaining personal financial freedom is getting started. Ilyce ...
The bestselling guide to being a ladies manrevised and updated. Providing clear, no-nonsense solutions for many difficult dating/relationship problems, this is an invaluable guide for any ...
Talk Less, Say More is a revolutionary guide to 21st century communication skills to help you be more influential and make things happen in our distracted, attention-deficit world. It's loaded ...
How to get elected--and live to tell the taleBill Rauch has lived an unusual political life: a decade as press secretary, advance man, and confidant to New York mayor Ed Koch, ...
Drawing on recent research indicating that everyone is born with an innate, biologically driven emotional temperament, the author identifies temperament types and behavioral patterns and provides ...
Rethinking Teacher Supervision and Evaluation. How to Work Smart, Build Collaboration, and Close the Achievement Gap. Kim Marshall. Rethinking Teacher Supervision and Evaluation. In this important ...
From The Wall Street Journal comes the definitive guide to management ideas and practices with lasting impact. For decades, understanding management—what works, and what ...
How to Cook for Crohn's and Colitis is a cookbook for anyone who suffers from inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, not to be confused with irritable bowel syndrome) or cooks for someone who has ...
It can be a concierge, camera, flashlight, game console, magazine, photo editor, panorama maker, note taker, travel planner, radio, bookstore, night-sky guide, GPS, music player, music maker, and ...


