<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: What An Amazing Book! Review: I have been in and around start ups for years now, most recently as a senior executive of a security software company. I have read more books on entrepreneurship than I can remember and I concentrated on entrepreneurship in business school. I have never seen a book as penetrating, practical and on target as this one for the topic that it addresses.What makes this book different is: - it is the only one that thoroughly addresses a start up at concept phase, before your business plan, a partner, money or anything else. Every other entrepreneurial book starts after you've decided you have a good idea or devotes a token chapter that tells you to do market research. This book actually steps you through evaluating and modifying your idea to make it fly. - it provides a practical thorough checklist, with detailed explanations, to evaluate a product/business concept quickly and completely and on how to improve the ratings if your business idea doesn't fly the first time around. What makes this checklist even more valuable is that the criteria are based upon the real-world entrepreneurial experiences of the author. - it gets you to focus on your gut-feelings about your idea. If you think you have a good idea - the spreadsheets all work out - but your gut feelings tell you that all is not well, this book will help you identify why and guide you on how to fix it. - it will tell you if your business idea is a bad one - before you spend a dime. Better be sure you're not "pretending not to know". - it shows you how to do a first-pass evaluation of any idea in 20 minutes or less, without doing a bunch of premature research. My only complaint is that Tom started teaching at Columbia Business School in 1996 and I graduated in 1990, so I missed him by six years. If you're going to start your own company, take a job at a start up or young company, fund a start up or launch a new product or service, buy this book.
Rating: Summary: What An Amazing Book! Review: I have been in and around start ups for years now, most recently as a senior executive of a security software company. I have read more books on entrepreneurship than I can remember and I concentrated on entrepreneurship in business school. I have never seen a book as penetrating, practical and on target as this one for the topic that it addresses. What makes this book different is: - it is the only one that thoroughly addresses a start up at concept phase, before your business plan, a partner, money or anything else. Every other entrepreneurial book starts after you've decided you have a good idea or devotes a token chapter that tells you to do market research. This book actually steps you through evaluating and modifying your idea to make it fly. - it provides a practical thorough checklist, with detailed explanations, to evaluate a product/business concept quickly and completely and on how to improve the ratings if your business idea doesn't fly the first time around. What makes this checklist even more valuable is that the criteria are based upon the real-world entrepreneurial experiences of the author. - it gets you to focus on your gut-feelings about your idea. If you think you have a good idea - the spreadsheets all work out - but your gut feelings tell you that all is not well, this book will help you identify why and guide you on how to fix it. - it will tell you if your business idea is a bad one - before you spend a dime. Better be sure you're not "pretending not to know". - it shows you how to do a first-pass evaluation of any idea in 20 minutes or less, without doing a bunch of premature research. My only complaint is that Tom started teaching at Columbia Business School in 1996 and I graduated in 1990, so I missed him by six years. If you're going to start your own company, take a job at a start up or young company, fund a start up or launch a new product or service, buy this book.
Rating: Summary: Tighten all your plan details before you launch! Review: I launched a computer consulting business in 2000, at the worst possible time--budgets were being cut, layoffs were constant, government funds were "on hold", and new prospects were not moving, based on "wait & see" hold--all contributing to a death nell to my new firm. While my first two years were profitable, my contract-to-contract business was clearly not sustainable. "Will It Fly" enabled me to completely re-invent my firm to focus on a growth market that would provide extended play for long-term growth: "Homeland Security Consulting". Using the scorecard, I identified the opportunities in this new area that would leverage our strengths and experience, but take advantage of new opportunities for pursuit. In the space of 6 months, I now have three channel deals under contract, with sustained revenues forecast for 4Q03, growing by 20% over the next 18 months. The 44 scorecard planning factors from this book, provided criteria for finetuning the plan, addressing key service delivery details, and ensuring honest self assessment of strength and weaknesses, to provide the confidence to strike in this new direction. With its new direction, my firm focused on an early success that has created the foundation of sustained returns to come over time. I recommend this book highly to anyone who is about to start, or kick-start, a company, and who is driven to make it succeed against seemingly tall odds.
Rating: Summary: This is an excellent and needed book for entrepreneurs Review: I would give this a 7 on a 5 point scale. This author presents a list of 44 criteria that you should consider in any new business start up. Its one of those matrix scoring systems -- which you'd never use to make a critical decision, like choosing your spouse. So, why would you use it for your business start up? THIS ONE IS DIFFERENT because of the authors extensive experience. His practicality and experience glows through the simple math weightings. You see the why and the how of each criteria. And, you can see that they have been tested on many previous business ideas and start ups. You can use this system to evaluate the likelihood of success of your new venture... or you can use it to tune it up. I found using the system to evaluate several business ideas at once to be very helpful. I particularly enjoyed the author's reasoning on the weights applied to each of the criteria. THIS IS A REQUIRED BOOK for anyone starting up a new business. Its very practical, usable, and easy to apply. John Dunbar Sugar Land, TX
Rating: Summary: This is an excellent and needed book for entrepreneurs Review: I would give this a 7 on a 5 point scale. This author presents a list of 44 criteria that you should consider in any new business start up. Its one of those matrix scoring systems -- which you'd never use to make a critical decision, like choosing your spouse. So, why would you use it for your business start up? THIS ONE IS DIFFERENT because of the authors extensive experience. His practicality and experience glows through the simple math weightings. You see the why and the how of each criteria. And, you can see that they have been tested on many previous business ideas and start ups. You can use this system to evaluate the likelihood of success of your new venture... or you can use it to tune it up. I found using the system to evaluate several business ideas at once to be very helpful. I particularly enjoyed the author's reasoning on the weights applied to each of the criteria. THIS IS A REQUIRED BOOK for anyone starting up a new business. Its very practical, usable, and easy to apply. John Dunbar Sugar Land, TX
Rating: Summary: Awesome book!!! Review: I'm one of those many Columbia students that Tom McKnight mentions in the introduction. Having survived his class 5 years ago, I jumped and bought a copy when I saw he'd distilled his teachings into a book. You won't be disappointed. The magic of Tom's wisdom is that he boils down each concept to a catchy phrase, and those fun phrases anchor the ideas. After reading the book, you'll find that each business you think about triggers a bunch of "happy factors" "cash flow now" "hot market" etc etc etc. If you don't think you need this, read page 261 onwards: "pretending not to know." Let that chapter ring in your ear, and keep you straight! In any case, 5 years later, I still find Tomisms jumping into my thoughts at every corner. Reading the book was a great experience - it refreshed the elements I had forgotten about, and I learned several new ones. Similar to a Anthony Robbins seminar... you will never be the same!!! The book is also like a Tony Robbins seminar in another way. You don't have to work too hard at it. Just read the book, and you'll find the language creeping into your brain on its own. Facing a business challenge, unemployed, etc? This book will squeeze you through your own fears and limitations and make you a winner.
Rating: Summary: Awesome book!!! Review: I'm one of those many Columbia students that Tom McKnight mentions in the introduction. Having survived his class 5 years ago, I jumped and bought a copy when I saw he'd distilled his teachings into a book. You won't be disappointed. The magic of Tom's wisdom is that he boils down each concept to a catchy phrase, and those fun phrases anchor the ideas. After reading the book, you'll find that each business you think about triggers a bunch of "happy factors" "cash flow now" "hot market" etc etc etc. If you don't think you need this, read page 261 onwards: "pretending not to know." Let that chapter ring in your ear, and keep you straight! In any case, 5 years later, I still find Tomisms jumping into my thoughts at every corner. Reading the book was a great experience - it refreshed the elements I had forgotten about, and I learned several new ones. Similar to a Anthony Robbins seminar... you will never be the same!!! The book is also like a Tony Robbins seminar in another way. You don't have to work too hard at it. Just read the book, and you'll find the language creeping into your brain on its own. Facing a business challenge, unemployed, etc? This book will squeeze you through your own fears and limitations and make you a winner.
Rating: Summary: Entrepeneurs and New Venure Capitalists Must Read! Review: This book will not only inspire your great idea to come to life; it will provide the framework and guidelines to direct your ideas into a viable business venture. "Will it Fly" clearly and concisely makes you think seriously about your new business and motivates you to put your best foot forward in the marketplace.
<< 1 >>
|