Teams Books
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A Good ReferenceReview Date: 2006-02-01
A compendium of 102 marketing strategies to meet sales goalsReview Date: 2005-11-12
Cutting the Fat From The BoneReview Date: 2005-10-08
I don't doubt that most authors of marketing books often work extra hard to find new and creative perspectives on their subject. Unfortunately, however, most fail, as very often their approach is filled with a great deal of hype, but little useful content.
Now, along comes John M. Fox's fresh and innovative approach with his manual Marketing Playbook: The Manual for Growing Organizations 102 of the Best Marketing Plays to Get Your Sales Team Across the Goal Line, where the author uses the metaphor of a football playbook to tutor his readers on how to develop an effective and winning marketing plan.
The manual organizes itself into 102 plays, each comprising one glossy page with full color images, wherein you have the following sections: a diagram, illustration or picture of the Play when correctly executed, next to the image you have the number and name of the Play, on the left hand side of the page you have the strategies and costs, while the center of the page consists of the Assignments and Coaching Points, and the bottom of the page indicates the Primary Receivers as types, their level, and who is the product or service best suited for.
In addition, Fox includes a value-added bonus by providing at the end of some of the pages a section called Extra Points, where you can download from the author's website extra information pertaining to the Play. There is even a scoreboard that rates the Play's strategic or tactical applicability.
For example, if we look at Play 35, Press Releases That Get Ink, we notice that the focus of the strategy is to get your news story in the press, what are the expected costs of a professional writer, how the marketing team and the PR agency should work together, and ends with vital coaching points.
By presenting the material in this way, devoid of technical jargon, verbiage and redundancy, fundamental principles are broken down into understandable messages that everyone can easily follow. Moreover, the book is as informative as it is fun, as the author has taken pains to be clear and concise, while keeping the tone light and approachable. Although, the author states in his notes that he has written the book from the first-person to company leaders, rookie employees and the self-employed will likewise benefit from its reading.
For those who wish to explore the various topics further, the author provides a bibliography of references, resources and additional reading that correspond to each of the Plays. There is even at the end of the manual a glossary index containing a listing of some familiar and unfamiliar terms the author uses in his presentations.
Norm Goldman, Editor Bookpleasures
Fun, creative, concise and complete marketing for growth companiesReview Date: 2005-09-28
Has what marketing and sales people needReview Date: 2005-05-26

Used price: $11.85

Unleashing GeniusReview Date: 2008-06-30
EXCELLENT BOOK!Review Date: 2008-06-17
A MUST READ if you want to find your Genius in ALL aspects of your life.
Lisa Garvey
The Studio Event Group
Power for LeadershipReview Date: 2008-05-16
Pure GeniusReview Date: 2008-05-13
David Brownstein, PCC, CPCC.
[...]
Unleashing GeniusReview Date: 2008-05-01

Used price: $17.19

Yet another tool in the Agile toolbox!Review Date: 2007-11-30
Great bookReview Date: 2007-11-05
Excellent WritingReview Date: 2007-01-06
Just starting out with "agile"? Try Crystal before XP.Review Date: 2006-03-10
InformativeReview Date: 2006-02-02

Used price: $25.33

Book reviewReview Date: 2008-09-07
he loved it! The best birthday present i bought for my father yet.
He really enjoyed the book.
Could be betterReview Date: 2008-08-15
Greatest Team Ever - Cowboys Dynasty (book) is the best!Review Date: 2008-01-22
Informative and Beautiful PicturesReview Date: 2008-01-19
2 stay 1 to IraqReview Date: 2007-12-13
1 book is going to my younger brother who is in Iraq fighting for Our Country - He'll love his signed copy.
1 is for my father-in-law... I know this lifelong Cowboy fan will love to relive the memories of this team through the pages of Norms book.
Of course I will love my copy here in N. Texas - Thanks Norm!!!

Used price: $7.33

Great things come wrapped in small packagesReview Date: 2008-06-11
Vital tool for consultingReview Date: 2007-07-04
Quick ReferenceReview Date: 2007-05-14
Memory Jogger II customer reviewReview Date: 2007-03-08
Tools for excellenceReview Date: 2006-06-30


Real life examples to apply to your lifeReview Date: 2002-08-21
Fits every office!Review Date: 2002-07-08
Perfect timingReview Date: 2002-07-15
The Power of a Good Fight brings hope and ease to managers in what often seems to be an unmanageable work world, by simply and powerfully taking us step by step through all the What-ifs we face. Ahhh...It feels like having a coach at my side. I liked the book and plan to pass it around!
The Power OF A Good Book!Review Date: 2002-07-08
Lynne Eisaguirre explains why actually starting a fight can be the best way to improve your work environment. Eisaguirre's advice is right on target. I tried out her suggestions and have had a great response. From now on, I plan to address work place issues as they come up, just as I always have in my personal life.
If I Had Known Then What Lynne Eisaguirre Tells Me Now . . .Review Date: 2002-07-08

Used price: $6.50

A DIE HARD FANS BOOKReview Date: 2008-07-12
Hilarious and insightfulReview Date: 2008-05-07
Sox Rule!Review Date: 2007-04-04
A True Sox Fan's BookReview Date: 2007-02-01
"Sox and the City" will most interest Chicagosns, of course. But all baseball fans might enjoy it. After all, being a White Sox fan in a city with more than one team, and an ancient generational rivalry (I won't name that OTHER team) is an experience few living baseball fans still know. the annual highs and lows (and finally triumph) that made the suffering all worth it. Only perhaps New Yorkers share the experience (and even the New York Mets are stand-ins for the old Yankees-Dodgers-Giants rivalry).
If you love baseball, pick this one up!
Passionate White Sox fan's view of recent Sox history, through 2005Review Date: 2007-11-18
Roeper deftly interweaves three main storylines in "Sox and the City": the highlights of the past 40 years of Sox history; Roeper's own personal experiences as a fan attending more than 1000 Sox games; and the highlights of the 2005 season and World Series run. Along the way Roeper provides a personal, often humorous view of the main topics in Sox history: the different Sox teams that have been assembled over the years; what it means to be a Sox fan in what will always (unless the demographics of Chicago change radically) be a Cubs town, including especially the Sox/Cubs rivalry among the fans (which, because of geography is more passionate - at least on the Sox side - than any other intercity major league rivalry); Harry Caray's move from the Sox to the Cubs; Bill Veeck's attempts to generate excitement (and bring in paying fans) on the southside; Disco Demolition Night; the move from Comiskey to the Cell; and much more.
There is so much White Sox history that it is impossible to capture it all in a single volume, but Roeper hits all the highlights. His prose is very accessible, humorous, and direct. "Sox and the City" is likely to become the definitive guide to what it means to be a White Sox fan in the present day.
Why only four stars? Roeper's done an admirable job in all areas of the book except two: explaining precisely what made the 2005 team different than all other White Sox teams, and capturing the excitement and impact of the Sox's 2005 World Series victory on the city of Chicago. Perhaps the latter is an impossible task to translate into words - you had to be there.
All literate White Sox fans should read this book.
Used price: $60.45

Excellent Resource!Review Date: 2005-08-08
Almost as good as in personReview Date: 2000-03-18
WOW!!!Review Date: 2001-12-06
The best single volumeReview Date: 2001-04-30
If you know someone who's budget allows only one book, this is a great place to start.
Useful and UseableReview Date: 2001-12-05
Very good written and visual descriptions. In addition,the authors focused a great deal on assisting the reader in identifying and locating the resources and tools necessary for each activity and initiative. The detailed information is useful for both purchasing and creating additions to your equipment bag of tricks. This feature alone has been very attractive to those browsing through the book at our introductory level, facilitator workshops.
The book features a good blend of low prop, portable activities along with less-portable intiatives. Also, helpful variations of activities such as the spider web and bull ring are provided.
You may find less expensive, activity books, but this remains an excellent value as a quality resource book.
For those looking to begin a library - this is one of my top five recommendations. If you are an experienced facilitator, you will likely find good information, but you may not find the book as valuable as a less experienced facilitator.

Used price: $1.10

This book featured in Fortune MagazineReview Date: 2006-06-15
........ The fact is, most of what you've read about teamwork is bunk. So here's a place to start: Tear down those treacly motivational posters of rowers rowing and pipers piping. Gather every recorded instance of John Madden calling someone a "team player." Cram it all into a dumpster and light the thing on fire. Then settle in to really think about what it means to be a team.
We're certainly not against the concept of teamwork. But that's the point: All the happy-sounding twaddle obscures the actual practice of it. And teamwork is a practice. Great teamwork is an outcome; you can only create the conditions for it to flourish. Like getting rich or falling in love, you cannot simply will it to happen.
We will go further and say: Teamwork is an individual skill. That happens to be the title of a book. Christopher Avery writes, "Becoming skilled at doing more with others may be the single most important thing you can do" to increase your value - regardless of your level of authority.
As work is increasingly broken down into team-sized increments, Avery's argument goes, blaming a "bad team" for one's difficulties is, by definition, a personal failure, since the very notion of teamwork implies a shared responsibility. You can't control other people's behavior, but you can control your own. Which means that there is an "I" in team after all. (Especially in France, where they spell it Equipe.)
Managerial MaterialReview Date: 2007-08-24
Individual Responsibility ExposedReview Date: 2006-03-21
Take Responsibility for Team SuccessReview Date: 2002-05-16
Christopher M. Avery has captured this idea and more in his latest book, Teamwork is an Individual Skill: Getting Work Done When Sharing Responsibility. Chris suggests that individuals take responsibility for team success versus blame others He challenges the reader to be proactive and work through team issues rather than avoid or accommodate others.
This is a perfect book for team members who have been on teams before. It will validate good team behaviors and point out areas to upgrade...in a gentle and non-threatening way. The book is easy to read with lots of stories and examples to highlight the key points.
The first sentence floored meReview Date: 2003-04-16
I am the most experienced and capable person on my team, yet with all of my background I have come to realize how relatively little influence I often have on team performance, and on my ability to push the team in the direction I think it should go. The very first sentence in your book on page 1, "Do you share responsibility with others to get work done but don't have authority over them (and they don't have authority over you)?" absolutely floored me, 'cause that is me to the tee.
I had only gotten to page 8 of your book when I was thoroughly blown away by the directness with which the differences between flat and hierarchical structures were addressed. At my company there is no mention of this approach; even once when I mentioned the term "semi-autonomous team" to the most qualified tech (who happened to be on day shift--arguably a more hierarchical environment due to the presence of many exempt employees) he did not know what the term meant. The company has this structure in place almost as an unwritten agenda.
Your comment on page 5, "Many individuals--especially smart, high achievers--can experience great angst if asked to serve in teams." is in retrospect a great source of comfort to help me understand my angst during my three years with this company. In all of the areas I have worked in during that time I am sure that I had (at least on paper) more qualifications than any one other person (B.S. deg, two A.A.S. degs, 12+ prior years of technical experience, and a whole host of other skills that my teammates do not exhibit.) Plus add to that, that my experience has almost exclusively come from a strongly tilted hierarchical background in retrospect is why I struggled with teams, as you describe them.
Every page of your book is quite thought-provoking, causing me to pause and reflect on how your observations compare to my situation.

Used price: $4.21

thanks -Review Date: 2008-02-13
i have only read excepts of the book but will buy it my dad is dying of parkinson disease 1000 miles away i am a daddy girl so this time is hard anyway since i have no way to see him
your book helps so much
turns out my dads dog-has saved my dad a few times himself by going to get mom everytime dad falls or needs things
i know if i could get up to dad i could train the dog to do more
the dog is a cocker spaniel raised from 2 weeks old by my mom,but seems to glue itself to dad as dad got sicker
as i always said dogs know more then we think they do and do so much for people
what a gift god gave with allowing us a small time with his critters
[...]
My Sincere Thanks to Lynne HugoReview Date: 2006-08-19
Thought-provoking, funny, helpful: a winner of a book.Review Date: 2006-03-21
A book for dog & nature lovers. Review Date: 2005-08-16
Great book!Review Date: 2005-08-15
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Fox breaks the sales stage down into logical segments and provides good "plays" to make the sales process more productive. Sales segments include: Thinking, Reaching, Engaging, Keeping.
None of the plays are innovative, but they are relevant. He provides the reader with good insight and detail on "plays" such as print advertising, Linkedin, PR, Customer referrals, Customer surveys etc. He also makes an effort to cost out these plays. I did find some of his costings on the high side, but it is up to you "the player" to make sure you get your value for money.
The book is not cheap, but if you want a good reference, idea book at your fingertip, it is good value.