The Best Business Startup Books by Melvin Feller
Best
Business Startup Books by Melvin Feller.
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Melvin Feller Business Group in
Texas and Oklahoma. Melvin Feller MA founded Melvin
Feller Business Group in the 1970s to help individuals and organizations
achieve their specific Victory. Victory as defined by the individual or
organization are achieving strategic objectives, exceeding goals, getting
results or desired outcomes and a positive outreach. He has extensive
experience assisting businesses achieve top and bottom line results. He has
broad practical experience creating WINNERS in many organizations and
industries. He has hands-on experience in executive leadership, operations,
logistics, sales, program management, organizational development, training, and
customer service. He has coached teams to achieve results in strategic
planning, business development, organizational design, sales, and customer
response and business process improvement. He has prepared and presented many
workshops both nationally and internationally.
Melvin
Feller is known as “The Entrepreneur’s Mentor” because Melvin walks his talk.
Melvin Feller has been there and done that and more importantly, Melvin Feller
knows how to transfer the skill-set for success. This is main reason that he
has been the sought-after coach to hundreds of small business owners,
entrepreneurs, Realtors, Real estate investors and service professional
internationally. Melvin Feller’s main talent is to show you how the step by
step process to build and enjoy a successful 6-figure plus business while
having a balanced life.
Most of the startup learning curve
is a learn-on-the-job endeavor. Nothing replaces the real experience of
managing your own company; however, there are some lessons that are worth
learning ahead of time.
Smart entrepreneurs learn to pick
out which teachings should be followed and which should be discarded.
This is my common response I send
when friends ask for a book list. I actually think blogs are far more important
because they’re real-time and often include comments that can help the reader
learn the subtleties and exceptions of an argument. As I’ve said before,
instead of reading this blog, I highly recommend these:
Paul Graham, Steve Blank, Brad Feld,
Fred Wilson, Mark Suster, Guy Kawasaki, Venture Hacks, and a daily check-in at
Hacker News,
But there’s something nice about
books. Books are consumed in a different setting. They linger on bookshelves.
They get highlighted and earmarked. If you’re new to the startup world, I would
recommend reading and re-reading the following 6 books. In fact, I would go
farther and say that you should not start your company until you read through
this list:
The 6 best startup books to read
before starting your company
Lucky Or Smart? by Bo Peabody
A lot of
this book is understanding how to put luck on your side. I put this book as
first though because it can help you understand if you want to be an founder or
a manager. Founders are a special breed. Peabody claims it’s the B- players
that like to hack systems so that they get 80% of the result for 20% of the
efforts. Managers are early employees, A+ players, that can take a founders
vision and create something remarkable. It’s helpful to understand which one
you are. And it’s helpful to know how luck and intelligence work together. As
he says: “I was smart enough to realize I was getting lucky”
Getting Real by the guys from 37
signals
If you’ve never built a product or
if you’re a non-technical MBA, start here. The purpose is to learn the basics
of agile development early on.
The m.o. of 37 Signals is:
“We believe software is too complex.
Too many features, too many buttons, too much to learn. Our products do less
than the competition — intentionally. We build products that work smarter, feel
better, allow you to do things your way, and are easier to use.” Getting Real
is how they teach you to do the same.
The Art of the Start by Guy Kawasaki
Guy will
show you how to start the company and how to raise money. This is your
replacement for whatever textbook you used in your entrepreneurship class. It’s
a nuts and bolts guide to what you do at each stage of start-up process.
Kawasaki is great about helping you understand how investors will view you.
One great example, he directs you
against putting a competitive profile slide in your pitching deck that shows
your features vs. their features. He’s seen this enough times to know it’s a
useless cliché: the entrepreneur always claims to have more features than the
competition. His solution is to list out your unfair advantages and their
unfair advantages in order to prove you have a reasonable perspective on your
market. Good stuff.
The Four Steps to the Epiphany by
Steve Blank
From my vantage point, Steve Blank
is this year’s favorite author, blogger, professor, and speaker. I know that
some venture capitalists give his book out to all newly-funded management
teams. (To show how aware I am of my own hypocrisy–Steve Blank teaches
entrepreneurship at a business school–perhaps better than anyone else
anywhere.)
Blank
outlines a method called customer development. In his words: “Your startup is
an organization built to search for a repeatable and scalable business model.
Your job as a founder is to quickly validate whether the model is correct by
seeing if customers behave as your model predicts. Most of the time the darn
customers don’t behave as you predicted.”
Rework also by the guys from 37
signals
Rework is a collection of essays
from their wonderful blog, Signals vs. Noise. Reading it as a whole is a nice
way to learn about how to think of your startup as a business that needs to
make money. These guys are pro-bootstrapping, pro-profits, and anti-venture
investing. They’re a nice counterpoint to much of the startup literature that
focuses on how to raise money as the primary goal in the early part of a
company.
Founders at Work by Jessica Livingston
This is a good last book for this
list because it gives your insight into founder culture. One of the most
interesting (and unexpected) aspects of being in Your Combinator is that we got
to see so many other founders working on their startups. Entrepreneurship can
be a lonely endeavor and it’s nice to have some perspective on how other
founders manage ups and downs while executing at very high levels. The early
days of the startup are the most interesting and unlike anything that comes
afterward.
In her words: “This is what
productivity looks like. This is the Formula 1 race-car. It looks weird but it
goes fast.”
Those are my 6 favorite and of
course I feel are very foundational!
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