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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: $19.95
Your Price: $13.57
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Sometimes Change is not necessarily for the better ...
Review: And through out the text, there's no mention of it.
Yes, I do believe that this is a great little book, explains some of the profound truths in an easy, simple manner. Some of the wordings actually inspired me. Its very hard to come across books like this, they happen once in a long time. The narrative style is elegant. You can read it over and over again, as many times as you want, and will come across newer truths which you didnt think of before. The best part is you can read it and finish the entire book in 20 minutes! But the profoundity of facts embedded in this book is enormous. I would recommend this book to anyone (even those who are least interested in reading as a hobby).

I do have something contrary to whats defined in this book: In Contrast to what the authors claim, sometimes changes are not necessarily for the better. Changes dont always result in the betterment of life. Certain situations simply may not have the right ingrediants for the change (the timing, people, environment and the dynamics being the factors). While it is always good to be prepared, it may not always be wise to encourage change. There are many, many instances in history that can be quoted as examples of.

While the authors may have ignored it in their message, it certainly does not discount the greatness of the rest of the book. I just wanted to convey that there may be a slightly different angle to understanding the change process.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: If people think this is profound, we're in serious trouble.
Review: I've read dozens of articles that have referred to this text and seen that this tome has been on the various bestseller lists forever, so I finally broke down and got a copy. I have to admit I was very skeptical about it as I found the One Minute Manager, the precursor to this effort, to behave the all time worst hype-to-substance ratio I'd ever seen.

This book ranks right up there on that score as well. If this is what passes as profound in today's world, then we are all in serious trouble.

This book is a very short missive supposedly dealing with change. The "book" part is about 30 pages, stretched into 94 pages by using very large print, leaving lots of blank space on virtually every page and using lots of uninspired pictures.

Essentially, in Who Moved My Cheese? An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life, Spencer Johnson, Kenneth H. Blanchard use a fable about two mice (Scurry and Sniff) and two little people (Hem and Haw) who live in a maze.

All four are used to getting a regular supply of cheese at a particular location within the maze. Then, one day, the "givers of the cheese" change the location of the food. The two mice adjust to the change quickly, immediately moving away to look for the new location of the food. Hem and Haw react very differently; they get mad, feel that they deserve the cheese, don't want to search for new cheese and generally "hem and haw" about how unfair life is.

This is as sophisticated as this thing gets. While the title promises An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life all it really does is delineate the reactions of many people in the workplace to change. There is nothing of value or substance in here that would actually help anyone cope with the phenomenon of change in the workplace, or anywhere else.
This entire tome can be summed up in two sentences, as follows:
Change is an inevitable force that affects each individuals life. We must find way to cope with this force.

There! I've just saved you the price of this book!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Worthless
Review: Absolutely worthless book, unless you have really reached the bottom of your once successful career, or hold one of those "corporate strategic BS management / leadership" positions where you have to BS your way through to the management and colleagues all the time.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't Bother ...
Review: To me, this reads as a simplistic cliche.
And the Mouse-Cheeze metaphor only distracts
further from the book's transparent message.
Don't know how this made it to best-seller
category. Don't waste your time ...

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A book inside the box...
Review: I won't award this book one star for the same reason that I rarely offer five. Both are reserved for exceptional representations of the class good or bad, and if there is one thing this book isn't, it's exceptional. It's not exceptionally well written, not exceptionally appropriate, not exceptionally good, not exceptionally bad... in a word, it's quite unexceptional.

It's a cute re-hash of the same tired think-outside-of-the-boxisms we've all heard for years, only this time, there's some cheese and a bunch of anthopomorphized rodentia serving as the principle characters. There is a subtle irony in writing a book about change that's fundamentally indistinguishable from all other books about change that seems to be completely lost on the author. Trust me, if you're not a complete halfwit, you've experienced change your whole life, and there is nothing new that this book has to offer, really. Not even a new allegory.

...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Helpful at work
Review: My coworkers and I read this book when going through rough times at the office and it really helped give us a fresh perspective on some stressful changes that were coming down from the top.

So if you need a "new look" at a difficult work situation, I recommend this book. It will only take a few hours of your time and is very easy to read. It made a big difference in how I view opportunities.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Light and fluffy
Review: Not quite as deep and meaningful as a lot of people would lead you to believe it is. If you're down with not getting yourself into a rut and dealing with change then the underlying message in this book will leave you thinking,"that's it"?

I'm sure the message would be eye opening for some, but it's tough to believe that it will help people who have been working for more then a couple of years in the corporate world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: short but good
Review: It's a very short book but a good read. It uses one big metaphor to explain life. The most interesting self-help book i have read, that's for sure.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Who Moved My Cheese?
Review: This book is a fast read (under an hour) but provides excellent insight if you are dealing with inevitable change in your life. Like the characters in the story, how you handle changes in your life can lead to success or total failure. There is a great amount of wisdom in this seemingly small amount of text and should not be judged by its stature! Worth every penny!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Short, sweet, and worth your reading time
Review: There's a lot of hype surrounding this book. But keep in mind that it is about an hour's worth of reading at most due to it's small size, so stop whining already. The entire premise is a metaphor of a maze, cheese, and four distinct characters. Like all metaphors, it is certainly not a concise or all-encompassing one, but it does make a great point: change is inevitable, and we have to adjust accordingly.

The author is not saying that ALL change is good. Far from it, actually. He is saying that we have to stop having a victim's mentality when change does come our way and affect our lives, for the better or worse. Instead, we should be proactive instead of reactive, and constantly be vigilant in our lives for changes that may already be happening or that may be coming down the pipeline. Professional and personal happiness is a state of mind, and adaptable, versatile individuals not only survive change, but can actually thrive because of it.


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