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Who Moved My Cheese : An Amazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and In Your Life

Who Moved My Cheese : An Amazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and In Your Life

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No Longer Afraid
Review: The organization I work for is bringing in a team to study ways to streamline some of our procedures so we can better serve our customers. The idea has some people crawling out of their skins. Two teams have been set up to review policies, procedures etc. They gave us this little book and said it might be helpful before we start working on the things we feel we should change. (after reading negative reviews I want you to know we are not downsizing). What an amazing little book. Yes it is simplistic and the story is more of an allegory than deep literature, but everyone in the office (with the exception of a few who have the personalities of hem) have gotten so much from it in so little time. It is not just work related but personal. I am ordering multiple books to give to friends going through personal changes and to officers of an organization I belong to. I only wish this book had been available 4 years ago when my husband died suddenly after 32 years of marriage. I had never lived alone or made all my own decisions, so my cheese was certainly moved. Yes, I got through it but it would have been nice to have had a book like this to add a little humor to the changes I was making in my life. It will certainly lighten up the atmosphere at work.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Sad commentary on us
Review: Someone sent me this book. I spent the hour it takes to read it immobile, in shock. Where have we come to that people actually spend $20 on extended Hallmark cards and rave that it has "changed their lives?" A clever man, this author, he's made a fortune out of our ignorance on the most basic issues. Sad. Sad. Sad. The book went out with the rubbish the same evening and I sent a polite thank you.

What else can you do?

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Simplistic introspection
Review: After reading this book, I've decided that it is an extremely simplified segregation of what all of us feel inside at any given time in our lives. In fact, I had a hard time of hurdling the first flaw in the writing... the cheese is described as the consolidation of what one would want in my life, yet the entire book removes the power from the entity creating the cheese to say that the cheese can be molded and removed from someone's life. I don't buy that... scenarios change... my cheese preference remains the same. When the scenario changes is when I go elsewhere to find the fulfilling cheese. At any rate, this is mediocre at best.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I think that the people who.....
Review: ..... have gone out of their way to trash this book are among those who simply "do not get it" and frankly...never will. The point of the book is to get a person thinking and perhaps bring us back to the basics in life that are so often overlooked. Thinking this book is going to change your life is absurd and totally unrealistic. Put things in perspective and think a little!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Cheese (money) robber...
Review: The moral of this book reiterates what is already commonsense for most people, which is life sometimes changes unexpectedly. Obviously some people deal with change better than others, but the sheer overly simplistic tone of this book made it agonizing to read at points (especially the end). If this book is floating around your office, be weary. In my eyes it's simply corporate propaganda conjured up and deployed to train employees on how to best deal with erratic and continuously changing work environments. In other words, regardless if we (your company) move your cheese: live with it, love it, and move on.

Save your money...

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Cute and Valuable --- but Potentially Dangerous
Review: I never intended to even pick this book up. The title didn't particularly interest me. But it turned out to be an appealing little story, and a useful little handbook for dealing with change management at all levels and in all aspects of life. Normally, I deem books like this condescending, but the story here is so typical and essential, I thought that it could actually be effective --- especially for those in upper management, whose comprehension levels are usually somewhat limited. My fear, though, is that the book might do no more than serve as a downsizing handbook for upper management. Nonetheless, there is value to be gained from the story --- value that can help one deal with any kind of change, be it job-related or in one's personal life.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Absolute rip-off
Review: Change happens; deal with it. That is the total wisdom you will gain if you waste your money and an hour to read this grossly overpriced book. In 94 small pages of large type and full-page, repetitive illustrations, there is nothing useful. I have found more actual wisdom in a single Dilbert strip. The last several pages are nothing more than a blatant attempt to persuade gullible managers to buy the book by the ton. Apparently, that tactic has worked very well. I am not sure what that says about American business education, but it can't be good.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A little humor, a short story & lots of stuff to think about
Review: Although this is a simple story, I thought the mix of humor with concepts was okay. I found myself thinking about some of my own behavior as I read, so I felt the book met the goal. This certainly is not the "encyclopedia" of change management, but perhaps can offer a fun common language for a group to use when coaching each other.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Lighten up gang!
Review: If you are expecting a life changing experience, keep moving. This book is simply a nice 45 minute thought provoking experience. I think it is helpful to those with marriages and relationships more than anything else. How many people stay in a relationship because they lack the courage to search for "new cheese". Complacency can be the worst thing in a marriage and this book addresses that pitfall. I also see this as helpful to those who are "downsized" from a job after many years only to find a new job or career more satisfying than they could have imagined. I have clients who have found the best thing that ever happened to their career was having their "cheese" taken away.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It doesn' matter who or how you moved my cheese
Review: Spencer Johnson's "Who Moved My Cheese?" was given to me by my mother. Perhaps she hoped that I could read it and it would serve as some sort of inspiration in my life. After reading the book, I was able to categorize myself as what type of person I once was and the type of person that I would like to me. "Who Moved My Cheese?" should be given to every graduating senior, whether college or high school. It should be given to anyone that has in some way or another experienced a life changing experience. The book, not only protrays the way we should try to live our lives, but it tells us how to make the steps to get there. I've realized that it's not important why changes have come about, or even who decided to make the changes. The key to success and prosperity in life is to foresee change, and not only learn to adapt, but also accept whatever new elements have come with change.


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