Keeping A Business Diary or Two
Yesterday I spent a good amount of time in a nearby Barnes & Noble. It was time to cash in a credit there, so through the shelves I poked. I felt sort of like RageBoy, he who spends what seems a significant portion of his waking hours
doing just this. And who can blame him? Perusing titles and
flipping through the pages of various books -even sitting in one of
those nice and comfy chairs they provide and flat-out reading a book as
though it was the library- this is a pretty nice way to spend some time.
Looking
at the software support and how-to books, and at the general business
books, I had a bit of an epiphany. Call it a minipiphany.
There
are all sorts of "how to succeed at _____" books, as well as a million
or so catchy phrase and buzzword books, like how to become a rainmaker, a new age marketer, an eBay Power Player, a megabrand creator,
that sort of thing. Then there are some philosophical business
books, most of which border on Social Psychology or a particular
sociopolitical worldview. Helps to be already somewhat famous
before publishing one of those. And a zillion other types of
books, chestnuts, of sorts, in the business category.
I looked
at a few currently popular titles. I scanned some of the more
famous and been-around-awhile management gurus' titles. I tried
to find something that hit home with me, an area of interest, something
that would offer some insight or a new view, or educate me.
I
ended up getting a graphics support book for a software title.
Since I have less than no graphics talent, find the graphics programs
totally non-intuitive, a well laid out how-to, with example figures and
step-by-step instructions can only serve me well. I found one
that made sense to me, seemed easy to follow, and delved into some
topic points that have eluded me for a long time. So far this one
looks like a good choice; I've already learned a thing or two.
-------------mid post time-out, to be continued