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Personal Development

5 Must Read Books and Why

By Justin McCullough

5 Must Read Books and Why

One of my business boundary pushing colleagues, Jason Kellie, recently brought up a few thoughts on “books” and “reading” on his blog.

Jason wants to know a few things:

  • Why I read books
  • What my reading process is
  • What my top 5 book recommendations are
  • You can see Jason’s answers to those three points on his blog Idea2Opportunity.com.

    Jason and I tweet to each other daily, swap emails weekly, and skype occasionally. I respect Jason for his entrepreneurial ways and his willingness to act on his thoughts. He is business savvy, has a record of success, and fearless when it comes to exploring new territory. He also started an awesome CD / DVD company called DittoBite where you can print short-run or just one disk for about $1 and I think that business fits well with the growth in consumer production where “everyone” is now a producer. Jason is also a Linchpin and one of the earliest members of The Linchpin Way community.

    Jason, here are your answers…

    As I’ve mentioned in other blog posts, I believe in reading books. I’m a big reader and shared my 2009 book list as well as my first load of books to read for this year.

    Why I read books:

    Inspiration

    I read books with an open mind so it’s easy to be inspired when the information is let in freely. For me, books inspire me to create, experiment, contemplate, and go somewhere I may not have gone before. Books like Linchpin inspire me to act.

    Personal Growth

    I want to grow personally and books allow me to learn the truest lessons of the author. Think about that. A book is typically the cream that rises to the top in the author’s mind and you get it just by reading what may have taken them years to ascertain. Talk about short cuts to personal development.

    Mentoring

    As a mentor, it’s my responsibility to learn, stretch and grow so I can take information and teach others. No new information, no new teaching. Every book I read becomes useful to a future lesson I have not yet shared. Books like Marketing 2.0 inspire me to teach social media for business where as books like All Marketers are Liars inspire me to grow the potential of every marketer and business owner.

    Leadership

    The only way to see around corners and through walls is to have unexpected insight that most do not have. As a leader, the books I read coupled with my own real life experience allow me to see around corners, develop a broader worldview, and see trends, cycles and patterns that others don’t see because they don’t have the incoming data points to connect. Books like the Long Tail and Tipping Point allow me to better define the “why” behind the “what” and because I know to look for it – I see it when others don’t.

    Attention

    Yep, I said it. I read books for attention… Well I mean, I read books for the nuggets that are repeatable, easy to share and interesting. I read books for the story-telling value, the ability for me to have unexpected connections to conversations and ideas with other people. No-one likes a no-it-all, but everyone loves a good story (and the story-teller). Books keep me full of good stories to tell.

    My reading process:

    I have several books I am reading at a given time. As few as three and as many as six. I have my “clutch” book, the one I’m committed to reading the fastest. Then I have my “in progress” books that I want to read, but don’t have a mental timeline in mind. Then I have my “fluff” book that is my time away book (I treat this book like TV time – its entertainment). Then I have my “travel” book which is an audio book in my truck and instead of talk radio or music, I listen to an audio book – even if I’ve heard it already.

    I read my clutch book about 20 – 30 minutes daily. I typically read from my in progress books about 5 – 10 minutes daily. I read my fluff book when the moment feels right which is usually a few times a week for about 20 minutes. My travel book is the duration of my road trip so usually at least 30 minutes.

    Right now, I am reading 6 books as described above. Also, not that it matters, but I always read two pages at least and when I stop, I always stop on the left page at the first noticeable break or paragraph end so I know where to pick up later. Yes, I am a dork.

    Justin’s Top 5 Books

    This is tricky and it’s possible if you asked me at a later date I may not select the same books. I have intentionally not included spiritual books that are indeed on my top list.

    1. The Richest Man in Babylon by George S Clason – Ground Zero for understanding personal finances.
    2. The Greatest Salesman in the World by Og Mandino – We are all salesmen and this book is paramount for integrity based selling.
    3. How Full is your Bucket by Tom Rath and Donald O Clifton – Truly understand why and how positive interaction will change your life and those around you (it’s a lifestyle).
    4. Linchpin by Seth Godin – Own your life and live it fully. Your art is a gift, do the work that matters, don’t be a cog in the system.
    5. Purple Cow by Seth Godin – Success follows things that are remarkable. Be remarkable.

    What are your Top 5 Books? Tell me below and don’t forget to tell Jason on his blog.



    2010 Book Reading List – 1st load

    By Justin McCullough

    2010 Book Reading List – 1st load

    I have a habit of buying many books at once – in bulk.  Thanks to nice folks giving me BN.com gift cards, this is my first load of books for 2010.  Here’s to happy reading!

    Justins to read stack - January 2010

    Justin's "to read" stack – January 2010



    The Magic of Mentoring

    By Justin McCullough

    The Magic of Mentoring

    Mentoring requires you to be real, but that’s not a bad thing. Mentoring is pretty easy too. At times, it’s support or a nudge forward. Sometimes it’s a point-of-view or clearing of the air to move things forward. Sometimes it’s a friend or colleague offering insight to a persons blind spot. Sometimes it’s just a conversation over lunch or dinner that jars something loose and shifts a persons thinking. Other times it’s a referral or a suggestion to speak to someone new. Sometimes it’s giving something tangible or intellectual without strings attached. Sometimes its a promise to get others involved because you know you can. Sometimes it’s working for someone else pro bono when you could charge for it. Sometimes you don’t even think about it, you just roll up your sleeves and help.

    Mentoring pays it forward, moves other people, ideas and things forward, and generates good will. Plant your seeds of knowledge, kindness and interest in someone else and watch them grow. Be generous with your time, knowledge, and resources and you will live a happy and full life.

    All this may sound a bit like a fortune cookie, but trust me, give yourself to others and you will get it back in abundance. Giving someone cash is a transaction, giving a person your time, knowledge, consideration, guidance, and attention is a priceless investment in someones life.

    If you aren’t mentoring, you should be.

    (originally posted on 409news.com by Justin McCullough – leader4hire)



    Leaders are Readers My 2009 Book List

    By Justin McCullough

    Leaders are Readers My 2009 Book List

    So, two blog post got me thinking about the books I’ve read this year.  One from Annie Sorenson which I misstated the books I’ve read and another from Lauren Leto where I ribbed her for not having any business books on her list.

    Anyway, I am often asked “how I know what I know” and while I’d like to take credit for having a huge brain, vast intelligence and an uncanny ability to see the world in a way no one else does, I simply can’t tell that lie.  The truth is, a lot of what I know and the insights I have is because of what I choose to read.  I then apply these insights into my world view and cement them in real life examples of my own – making them my own, but most of what I know is seeded from great books.  I typically read 3 or 4 books at one time.  That seems to keep me the most interested and also allows me to cover several topics at one time.

    I’ve found that books on business, self improvement, sales and just about anything else are truly the cliff notes to success. All you have to do is invest some of your time and attention and a few bucks and you can learn what took someone else countless hours of personal experience and research to create.  Reading books is so much smarter, faster, and more insightful than college classes.  Of course, it’s worthless if you don’t apply what you read or learn and it doesn’t matter if you are reading books that only serve an entertainment purpose.

    I think I’ve covered all the books from this year.  The following is my list of books from 2009.

    1. Referral of a Lifetime by Tim Templeton. (read this twice this year)
    2. Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki with Sharon Lechter (second year in a row to read this book)
    3. The Microsoft Edge by Julie Bick
    4. Tribes by Seth Godin (very quick book – read twice this year)
    5. Innovation by Tom Gorman
    6. Multipreneuring by Tom Gorman
    7. How Full is Your Bucket by Tom Rath and Donald O Clifton ( I read this at least once a year).
    8. The Big Red Fez by Seth Godin
    9. Write the Perfect Book Proposal by Jeff Herman and Deborah Levine Herman
    10. All Marketers are Liars by Seth Godin
    11. Free Publicity by Jeff Criley
    12. The New Rules of Marketing and PR by David Meerman Scott
    13. Unleashing the Idea Virus by Seth Godin
    14. Positioning by Al Ries and Jack Trout
    15. Made to Stick by Chip Heath and Dan Heath
    16. Buzzmarketing by Mark Hughes
    17. Permission Marketing by Seth Godin
    18. Word of Mouth Marketing by Andy Sernovitz
    19. The New Influeners by Paul Gillin
    20. No B.S. Direct Marketing by Dan Kennedy
    21. What Would Google Do by Jeff Jarvis (have this on audio – 2 times this year).
    22. The Google Story by David Vise
    23. Purple Cow by Seth Godin (have this on audio – 5 times this year).
    24. Small is the New Big by Seth Godin (have this on audio – 3 times this year).
    25. Tipping Point by Malcom Gladwell (have this on audio – 2 times this year).
    26. The Long Tail by Chris Anderson
    27. How to Build a Complete Sales Person by Bryan Dodge (have this on audio – 3 times this year).
    28. Influence. The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini
    29. Yes! 50 Scientifically Proven ways to be Persuasive by Goldstein, Martin and Cialdini
    30. 91 Mistakes Smart Sales People Make by Tim Conner
    31. The 25 Sales Habits of Highly Succesful Sales People by Stephan Shiffman
    32. Cold Calling Techniques by Stephen Shiffman
    33. How to Become a Marketing Superstar by Jeffrey J Fox.
    34. Magic Bullets by Michael Kessee and Ankesh Kothari
    35. The Dip by Seth Godin
    36. What Matters Now by Seth Godin and friends (free ebook)
    37. Your Best Life Now by Joel Osteen
    38. The Shack by William P Young

    Liesure reading:

    1. NEXT by Michael Chrichton
    2. Ghost Radio by leopoldo Gout
    3. Busting Vegas by Ben Mezrich
    4. People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks
    5. The Prince of Frogtown by Rick Bragg
    6. No Survivors by Tom Cain
    7. Ghost Medicine by Andrew Smith
    8. The Boxer and the Spy by Robert B Parker

    So what are you reading?  Do you agree that books are better than college?  What do you recommend I read in 2010?



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