Which:
"Free: The Future of a Radical Price" by Chris Anderson
Why:
Because it drives home the point regarding how the prices of digital services will go to zero. And how you can still make money. The freemium business model
What's yours and why?
Losing My Virginity, Richard Branson. I read it at the age of 14, and I realized that I definitely don’t want to work for hire. At the age of 15, I launched my first startup. A very simple but very motivating book.
Marketing from A to Z
Philip Kotler
Why: it's a must for every indie maker, founder, marketer. The book is not new. But such books are usually called manuals.
@codeminion yes that is already on my to-read list :)
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To be honest many books left an impression on me.
Those that I found to be most interesting are:
Paypal Wars by Eric M. Jackson
Think and Grow Rich, Napoleon Hill
Average Is Over: Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation by Tyler Cowen
Data Smart Using Data Science to Transform Information into Insight
by John W. Foreman (
@martin_ratinaud I think their mindset is more for tech employees, rather than for the more entrepreneurial spirited. As an entrepreneur you need to take bold risks. I think they should write a book about working on concepts. Like hey.com the process leading to coming up with that. it's a bold move and must have been a lot of ideas on their table. It's a sort of divergence from their usual suspects. Maybe it will be their next book. Or maybe they dont want to spill their secrets 😸
There are two books I would absolutely recommend from a product management point of view.
"Inspired" from Marty Cagan and "Continuous Discovery Habits" from Teresa Torres.
Ideally start with "Inspired" and then continue with "Continuous Discovery Habits".
Why? IMHO the single most important thing you can learn from these book is how to interview users and how to derive guidance from these interviews (read: how to make insights actionable). We applied the techniques at our new startup. We ran 75+ user interviews so far to really understand our users, their problems and desires. We are using a template to structure the interview and the notes. You will end-up with tons of opportunities. It is totally amazing to see the patterns emerge from the interviews. Feed these opportunities in ChatGPT-4 and it will deduplicate and count them for you. This gives you a super nice ranking of what people actually need. It will help you to put the right stuff on your website and to build the right features into your product. You can of course also use these insights in your sales talks to break the ice and to demonstrate your domain knowledge.
@daniel_rodler Very insightful. Thanks for sharing. Personally I try to talk to the experts. Quality vs quantity. I guess it depends on what you are making as well.
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To be honest, I need to say "Rich Dad Poor Dad", while not exactly a business book. It's main premise is to not let yourself work for money but make money work for you. This message has stuck with me for years and has inspired me to dedicate myself to entrepreneurship, to hopefully make money work for me :)
@deds3t Yepp. I have not read this book. But I think the core message defines the age we currently are entering. Where you have to take responsibility for your future self. That nothing is promised. Where as before you could have the same job for generations.
“Obviously Awesome” by April Dunford
I reviewed everything I had been thinking about positioning. It is a big helper these days for me. “Think of your product as a fishing net”.
“Startup. Shift up. Screwup” by Jurgen Appelo
Modern practices on company building based on experience of various startup founders that Jurgen had interviews with. A bunch of new concepts like Innovation Vortex or business model as a family member.
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