Consultants Books
Related Subjects: Novell Systems CAD Systems Databases Legal Hardware Network Microsoft Systems Integrators Professional Associations Macintosh Systems Unix Systems Business Systems Data Transfer Embedded Systems General and Freelance Legacy Systems
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Used price: $30.65

The Coaching Starter Kit by Coachville.comReview Date: 2008-02-26
Simple steps to coachingReview Date: 2007-07-12
A book of listsReview Date: 2007-10-11
Good way to get startedReview Date: 2007-02-15
It has provided the start that I need before I meet my first client.
Excellent ResourceReview Date: 2007-01-21


Good basic starting point.Review Date: 2007-05-14
Great intro but you need moreReview Date: 2007-02-26
A Comprehensive How-ToReview Date: 2007-05-07
Image consultingReview Date: 2007-01-11
Highly recommended for anyone who wants to make it in that business.
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-01-11

Used price: $6.53

Nothing new hereReview Date: 2000-05-20
It's only a pamphlet!Review Date: 2001-12-14
A must for business image and great for the everyday.Review Date: 2000-07-18
Saved me time and money!Review Date: 2001-12-24
Thank heaven someone told me!Review Date: 2000-07-31
Ginger also gave me permission to buy really good quality clothing. Somehow I "knew" that I seldom wore many of the bargain clothes I had collected, but in reading this book, I felt like I had a loving friend looking at my closet and understanding me, rather than making me feel like a fashion emergency.
While I'll probably never taper or shorten my skirts, I know that's good advice for folks with really great legs. However, I definitely got a boost from the idea I only have a 6" waist ! Finally, toupee tape for shoulder pads and scarves that float is a tip that alone is worth the price of the book.
I re-visit the book every couple months to find another quick and easy way to make me feel great about myself and improve my appearance. Mom would really have loved that.

Used price: $7.85

Very useful cookbookReview Date: 2001-02-03
What a GREAT resource!Review Date: 2001-11-01
There are MANY of these types of books out there, but this is definitely in the 'Gotta have it' section. I bought it and continually use it as a resource.
The greatest part is that it covers some VERY difficult material well. I found fee setting and the interim and final reports extremely difficult to do before I bought this book.
It is important to note that this book is not just for independent consultants, but for anyone selling consulting services and other professional services.
If you are not sure whether you want it, get it at the library and take a look. Just remember to take it back!
Great for startups or exisiting businesses!Review Date: 2001-05-03
Dated MaterialReview Date: 2001-11-29
A keeper....Review Date: 2002-02-11

Used price: $25.00
Collectible price: $56.00

A great bibliographical resource and moreReview Date: 2007-11-21
The textbook on HR coachingReview Date: 2006-05-09
Hudson is the real deal.Review Date: 2003-11-08
A total disappointmentReview Date: 2000-08-15
A Handbook and Silent Coaching PartnerReview Date: 2001-11-09
The author's writing style is clear and only uses jargon relative to the context, ensuring a novice to the coaching practice feels immediately able to grasp key concepts. This is the value that managers, HR personnel and coaches alike will gain from the book...ease of understanding and practical.
It is a how to book and refernce guide that sets out to (and I daresay achieves)to establish a relationship with its reader; as a handbook of this nature should.
The life transition model that Hudson introduces, acknowledges the validity of adult hood problems, as being more than mere extensions of our child hood challenges. It acknowledges also the process of transition versus the static nature of a changing event.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

Used price: $17.98

great nursing memory supplementReview Date: 2008-06-13
Good Memory PromptsReview Date: 2008-06-04
Great Learning ToolReview Date: 2007-10-07
Memory Notebook of Nursing, Vol. 2Review Date: 2007-10-10
Nursing instructorReview Date: 2007-08-29

Used price: $0.01

Excactly what it purported to beReview Date: 2002-02-16
A must have!!!!Review Date: 2000-08-28
Handy Ready ReferenceReview Date: 1999-12-23
It is well written for its intended prupose. It is concise and to the point. Just what you need when you need to configure a component of Exchange Server.
I have referred to it on six occasions so far and found the answers five of those six occasions. The title is an apt one: The Administrator's Pocket Consultant.
WEAKReview Date: 2000-09-22
Good book to point you in the right direction quickly.Review Date: 2000-02-08

Used price: $2.50

Print version--yes; audiobook--noReview Date: 2008-02-08
Go Tucker, GoReview Date: 2007-10-10
As if that isn't enough, the setting of Smiley's novels leads to a comparison with another author, this one from a bygone era. Smiley captures today's Southern California as effectively as Raymond Chandler did in the `30s and `40s. But where Chandler sometimes employed pseudonyms for real locations - Bay City for Santa Monica, Idle Valley as an amalgam of various San Fernando Valley neighborhoods - Smiley's landscape is as accurate as a Thomas Brothers map. You could follow her directions down Sepulveda, La Cienega, or the 405 and see the very offices, restaurants, and denizens she describes so convincingly. Along the way she gives us bits of local South Land history, all the while conveying the very essence of what it means to be an Angelino.
In "Short Change", Smiley's latest effort, heroine Tucker Sinclair is caught in a web of deceit fueled by greed. This time she must appease competing land moguls, decipher a manipulating psychopath, and locate a troubled, missing client. And that's just during work hours. In her personal life Tucker is forced to confront her own lineage, even as she squeezes in a little love of her own. All of this is accomplished with the protagonist's signature wry humor and very human self-doubts.
Smiley gets better with each book, and Short Change is her best yet. As much fun as a fast ride along Mulholland Drive in a top-down Boxter.
--- Steve Long
a great page-turning readReview Date: 2007-08-09
A smart and sassy female detective storyReview Date: 2007-07-17
Los Angeles business consultant, Tucker Sinclair, has left corporate America and is trying to build her own business. She's currently working with Charley Tate. Charley is a P.I. who is also trying to get his business off the ground. But Charley's been sidelined by a hit-and-run driver (and a wife who rather he spent all of his time with her) and Tucker steps in to save the day.
Eve Lawson is a strange woman. It's as if she stepped out of the 1980s. She breezes into Charley's office and hires Charley to find out who is following her. The question is: who would want to follow a writer who is working on a book about the post-World War II real estate boom in Los Angeles?
But while Charley's back is on the mend, Eve's boyfriend turns up dead and Eve goes missing. Tucker had better start working overtime to solve the crime before anyone else dies. And while she's at it, Tucker has to build her own business, save Charley's, salvage what's left of her own love life and figure out a way to get her conniving aunt off her `back.' Auntie Dearest wants to evict Tucker from her ocean digs--and it might be that Tucker's mama will have to save the day.
Short Change is a fast and fun romp into Tucker Sinclair's world. She's smart, savvy and unique with enough dysfunction to make her a lot of fun. I'm looking forward to Patricia Smiley's next Tucker Sinclair novel. I want to see what happens with Deegan.
Armchair Interviews says: A new mystery series worth reading.
All About EveReview Date: 2007-12-10
Of course, there are the requisite number of personal preoccupations, e.g., Tucker's boyfriend, a handsome homicide detective with the LAPD, who seems to have had a relationship with a Deputy DA who thinks the relationship is still present tense; and a paternal relative who claims that Tucker's father is someone other than the man her mother married. While trying to deal with these distractions, Tucker becomes increasingly involved in the investigation of the murder and the whereabouts of Charley's client, imperiling herself in the process. There are questions of fraud, corporate greed and shady property dealing, though the tone is mostly light and the writing funny. Tucker is a good-humored and capable woman who is surrounded by a mother named Pooky who runs a yoga studio one of whose employees is named Petal; just possibly a father who goes by the name of Peaches LaRue; a West Highland terrier who was adopted and who is therefore referred to as a "used dog," et al - an altogether charming bunch, in a book whcih is equally delightful and fst-moving.

A Fine Mystery Set In An Unusual PlaceReview Date: 2002-05-05
Catnap does not include sleepingReview Date: 1999-04-15
This is where it all beganReview Date: 2003-11-11
Not only is Louie - the back cat that Temple pursues - intent on leading her to discover the body of Pennyroyal Press publisher Chester Royal- he also manages to squirm hs way into her heart - especially when he does a Sidney Carton and risks life and limb to help rescue Baker and Taylor - two cats who have been catnapped at that same ill-fated convention.
Temple is a Mighty Mite - small but brave and ferociously curious. Following Louie's lead, and with a bit of martial arts training from her divine new neighbor, Matt Devine - she manages to solve all the crimes. In the process she acquires a roommate and protector - the somewhat oversized but magnificent Midnight Louie.
It is the rollicking beginning to an aphabetical series of Midnight Louie mysteries - what could be looked on as the first chapter of one very long and entertaining mystery saga. While each book in this series stands on its own merits as a good read, it is great fun to start at the beginning and read the books in order. Then the real structure of this series becomes evident and the entertainment value triples.
Louie is not your ordinary cat detective. He plays an active part in solving the mysteries he encounters, whether it is simply calling attention to the most vital clues or by intervening tooth and claw to preserve and protect. He's tough talking, with an amusing way with words - a sort of feline Sam Spade but with a heart of gold - although he'd prefer that you not notice that. And Temple Barr is not your typical small female with a shoe obsession, but an intrepid investigator full of courage and heart.
Along the way we get some intriguing glimpses into the world of publishing as well as the vagaries of human nature. The Midnight Louie series may read like light cozy mysteries on one level, but read carefully. They are also insightful on a number of levels - and that insight keeps growing as the mystery progresses.
Another Cute Book from Carole Nelson DouglasReview Date: 2002-02-15
For those interested in the combination of cats and crime, I place the maunderings of Midnight Louie solidly between the interminable "Cat Who..." series and the delightful adventures of Mrs. Murphy. Louie plays a marginally more active role in crime solving than the Siamese Pair of the former, but is not quite so involved as the latter. Like Mrs. Murphy, he has a perky female associate to do the actual work of putting together clues and bringing them to the attention of the proper authorities. Unlike Mrs. Murphy, Louie seems a great deal more interested in self-agrandizement than in true crime solving. There is less of an emphasis on the legendary feline curiosity than there is on the equally legendary feline ego.
The setting is interesting as it gives a kind of perspective on Las Vegas as an alien culture. The supporting characters and subplots are derivative, and I thought the grand "revelation of the crime" scene, where the case was presented to all the suspects gathered in one room, was super unrealistic and annoying. Still, _Catnap_ kept me occupied on a grey afternoon when I couldn't think of anything better to do. If you don't go into it with very many expectations, you won't be disappointed.
As a series, the Midnight Louie books are standard for the genre and many are much more interesting and original than the first volume. The ongoing supporting cast is appealing, and the series-spanning subplots hooked me into reading past the first two books. Though the crimes and motives are fairly stock, some of the settings are quite original -- I especially liked the book set at a strippers' convention (_Pussyfoot_) and the one set at a Romance Novel convention (_Cat in a Diamond Dazzle). The series could use help from a continuity editor, however. In one book, a major event is stated to have happened both in 1969 and 1959; in others it seems that the author can't remember where one early crime happened, but sets it in this Vegas hotel or that as the whim takes her. Also, there are long sections dealing with the characters' "personal growth" that seem more like something from a psychology or self-help text than real conversations between people. And the characters have an annoying incapacity to use common contractions like "don't" or "won't," which makes much of the dialog seem stilted and unreal.
If you like gimick mysteries with a lot of fluff and not much suspense, you could do worse than the Midnight Louie books. Agatha Christie or Dorothy Sayers they're not, but they're still amusing.
CatnapReview Date: 2000-01-27

Used price: $17.18

Solid advice for the beginning expert.Review Date: 2003-09-21
Many "experts" have no interest in utilizing their knowledge in a legal setting. Frankly, at times, I don't blame them. However, being an expert in a particular field has its limitations relative to continuing challenges. Thus, many experts seek new, invigorating challenges. Those who have chosen to become testifying expert witnesses have most likely found the invigoration sought for displaying your knowledge in a courtroom is one of the greatest tests of that knowledgebase and your ability to articulate it. A daunting combination to be sure yet incredibly satisfying. I've been providing expert consulting and expert testimony services for close to ten years now. To say it is still a challenge and one that moves my adrenals into high gear is an understatement. However, it is one of the great highs relative to intellectual discourse and can be extremely financially rewarding.
THE EXPERT WITNESS HANDBOOK is the bridge between being an expert in one's field and displaying that expertise in a court of law. Dan Poynter has provided those interested in taking this bold step with a basic set of guidelines and recommendations relative to turning one's knowledge into a new (part-time or, in some cases, full-time) career path. In the first chapter, "What is an Expert Witness?" Mr. Poynter identifies what an expert witness does and why. However, this chapter's high point is the answers to his question, Why would anyone want to be an expert witness? Mr. Poynter goes on to answer these in fine detail; I'll just provide the base answer. In order: 1) To capitalize on your years of education and experience; 2) To get into the action (See! This is what expert thrive on.); 3) To put something back into the system; 4) To be hired to study (nirvana for life students); and 5) To make money.
From the first chapter forward, Mr. Poynter lays out a relatively clean chronology of the steps necessary for a "specialist" to become an "expert." Although every chapter will be important and vital to the neophyte expert, there are several chapters I would like to highlight as being germane and crucial to the seasoned expert as well. Chapter 7, "Maintaining Competence," is an almost laconic albeit important chapter advising the expert to continue to learn. For those who are eternal students, this will not be an issue. However, as a friendly warning, if one jumps into the expert arena and feels as though "I've made it," disaster looms for laws relative to experts change constantly as do the standards and landscape of one's field of expertise. Take this chapter to heart.
Probably the most important chapter and one ALL experts can refer to in the future is Chapter 11, "The Trial," although Chapter 10, "The Deposition" runs a very close second. In "The Trial," Mr. Poynter takes 50 pages of this 231-page book to describe the process and provide poignant Q&A between an expert and attorney on direct examination and the dreaded cross-examination. Mr. Poynter provides an excellent description of the process, the requisite preparation, and the actual flow of one's testimony. Before and after each Q&A, he espouses his opinion and advice to the reader, advice to be well heeded in most instances.
Overall, this is an excellent treatise on entering the expert witness arena. One area, in my opinion, Mr. Poynter did not cover in sufficient detail was the need for the aspiring expert to understand various points of case law relative to each expert specifically, the Daubert decision and its progeny. Although the intent of Mr. Poynter's book most likely was describe in sufficient detail the steps one must take to become a competent expert, the Daubert decision (and its progeny) are tantamount to any expert's acceptance in a court of law. Regardless, Mr. Poynter has written a very solid book and one I would recommend highly.
Some info., but poorly structured and writtenReview Date: 2007-07-26
First, the overall structure just seems to ramble along without a real plan of building from one section to the next.
Second, within sections it seems like topics just change in the middle of the section. I found myself reading some sections two or three times trying to figure out what connecting theme I was missing. I finally asked others to look at some of these sections (without any other prompting) and found that they could not figure out what was going on either.
Third, information is often repetitive across sections. A point will be covered once and then later covered again without any reference to the prior discussion and without any further insights.
Fourth, paragraphs are sometimes repeated almost verbatim. For example, a paragraph may occur at the beginning of a section and then again near the end with almost no change. My guess is that the author was moving things around in a quick edit and/or tossing it down either place it could work with the idea of returning to it later.
Fifth, the book uses bold faced paraphrases or quotes from other sources at the bottom of each page. I guess these are a clever way to show others have a similar view without really needing to work it smoothly into the text. However, they often are redundant (in the first chapter one page has a quote saying going to trial without an expert is on the edge of malpractice, two pages later there is a similar comment that says it is malpractice - both are from the same magazine). Worse, the references provided in no way allow a reader to go find the source and look at it for themselves. For example, if a magazine is cited there is neither date given nor a title of the article. It might have been quick, but it was not the most useful for readers.
Moving away from the specifics, I guess this shows how the author could write "over 100 books" as it says in his bio. I did find it strange that he kept stressing how careful we need to be in writing reports, yet he did such a sloppy job here.
To be fair (and why it got two stars instead of one) there is some useful information in here if you are willing to skim through and not get hung up on the flow. In the end, this is probably one or two decent articles of information if it was put together well, not a whole book. Of course, this is also cheaper than a lot of the other "comprehensive" books on being an expert witness.
Would I buy it again? No, but I would check it out of the library to take a quick look.
Good, but repetitious and needs a good editorReview Date: 2003-08-09
Expert Writing on Being an Expert WitnessReview Date: 2004-08-24
Very Informative BookReview Date: 2000-11-21
Related Subjects: Novell Systems CAD Systems Databases Legal Hardware Network Microsoft Systems Integrators Professional Associations Macintosh Systems Unix Systems Business Systems Data Transfer Embedded Systems General and Freelance Legacy Systems
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