the best business books of 2017 | non-obvious book award winners

27
15 Best Business Books Of 2017 For Leaders, Business Owners & Entrepreneurs by ROHIT BHARGAVA MARKETER | SPEAKER | AUTHOR | LISTENER PUBLISHED DECEMBER 7, 2017 HOLIDAY GIFT EDITION! A Curated Collection of the Best Business Books From The Past Year

Upload: rohit-bhargava

Post on 21-Jan-2018

3.345 views

Category:

Business


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

15 Best Business Books Of 2017 For Leaders, Business Owners & Entrepreneurs

byROHIT BHARGAVAMARKETER | SPEAKER | AUTHOR | LISTENER

PUBLISHED DECEMBER 7, 2017

HOLIDAY GIFT EDITION!

A Curated Collection of the Best Business Books From The Past Year

Page 2: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

THE APPROACH:

How Were These Books Chosen?

How much of a difference in the world and in your life can the idea of the book make?

How unique is the idea and its delivery – and how unlikely are you to find the big idea elsewhere?

Is the quality of the writing good enough so the idea is delivered in an impactful way?

How practical is the book in taking the idea and offering real ways to use it in life and business?

Is the book important enough to share with others in conversation or as a gift?

At the end of each year, we obsess over selecting 15 finalists for the Non-Obvious Book Award Shortlist and 15 more for the Longlist. The books we select are all evaluated* based on a sliding scale on the following five qualities:

Every year my team and I receive invitations to review dozens of business books. We also routinely spend thousands of dollars buying books for our learning library and as part of the curation process to produce our Non-Obvious Trend Report.

Page 3: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

THE APPROACH:

How We Read And Curate Ideas …

WANT TO GET THE WEEK’S MOST INTERESTING STORIES CURATED AND DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX EVERY THURSDAY MORNING?

SUBSCRIBE TO JOIN OUR EMAIL LIST HERE:

WWW.ROHITBHARGAVA.COM/SUBSCRIBE

Every year my team and I routinely curate interesting ideas and content to share either through my weekly newsletter every Thursday – or through my annual trend report. This is a snapshot of what the process looks like …

Page 4: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

The following are all of the books selected for the Shortlist and Longlist this year. All selections are listed alphabetically.

THE NON-OBVIOUS BOOK AWARDS

Shortlist and Longlist Selections

THE SHORTLIST: • Win Bigly – Scott Adams• Disrupt! – James Bidwell • Entrepreneurial You – Dorie Clark• Your Ad Ignored Here – Tom Fishburne• 50 Inventions That Changed The Modern

Economy – Tim Harford• Power of Moments – Chip + Dan Heath• Give Work – Leila Janah• Exactly What To Say – Phil Jones• The Unmade Bed – Stephen Marche• Hit Refresh – Satya Nadella• Grocery – Michael Ruhlman• How To Be A Bawse – Lilly Singh• Unleashing The Innovators – Jim Stengel• Hit Makers – Derek Thompson• No Ego – Cy Wakeman

THE LONGLIST: • Finish – Jon Acuff• Dollars and Cents – Dan Ariely• Barking Up The Wrong Tree – Eric Barker• All These Wonders – Catherine Burns• The Business of Persuasion – Harold Burson• How To Think – Alan Jacobs• Trust Rules – Bob Lee• The Power of Onlyness – Nilofer Merchant• Reset – Ellen Pao• The Infidel and the Professor – Dennis C.

Rasmussen• Radical Candor – Kim Scott• The Art of Stopping Time – Pedram Shojai• Everybody Lies – Seth Stephens-Davidowitz• The Grid – Matt Watkinson• Bored and Brilliant – Manoush Zomorodi

Page 5: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARDS:

The Shortlist

*Books are listed alphabetically

ABOUT THE LONGLIST: This year among all the books we considered, these were our top 15 choices for books we enjoyed the most.* Each book is reviewed here and on Amazon and rated using our five criteria to help you learn more, along with an easy link to buy the book:

Page 6: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

ABOUT THE LONGLIST: Every year in the course of evaluating over 100 books to include as finalists, there are always some that we love which don’t make the final Shortlist. This year, we’re sharing a few of those here in our 2017 Non-Obvious Book Award Longlist:

NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARDS:

The Long List

Page 7: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

There are 15 books on the short list for five final awards. The following are the awards that are available for books (winner announcements are at the end of this presentation) …

THE APPROACH:

What Categories Will Be Awarded?

Page 8: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

Opens your mind to consider why Trump might be an underappreciated master of persuasion. Over the past year, Dilbert creator Scott Adams has been vilified by the liberal media for being a rare supporting voice for the persuasive powers of candidate (and now President) Trump. This book is the victory lap he couldn’t help writing.

For example, he writes: "Instead of dribbling out one headline at a time so the vultures and critics can focus their fire, Trump has flooded the playing field. You don't know where to aim your outrage.”

To be fair, this book has some glaring editorial problems. Most notably, there is so much repetition of ideas (and words) from chapter to chapter that it seems like an editor barely looked at it. Those issues aside, reading his assessment of Trump as a master persuader was at once sickening and illuminating.

At the end of the day, the book paints a convincing picture that Trump mightknow exactly what he is doing, and has manipulated all of our attention exactly where he wants it. Like him or not, you have to admit his methods are working. Adams, for his part, is enjoying the show immensely. Whether you choose to do the same or try to mount your own resistance, this book will open your mind.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Win Bigly by Scott Adams

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 9: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A compilation of ideas that belongs on your bookshelf to inspire new thinking.As a trend curator, I have been a fan and reader of the excellent idea spotting work at Springwise for many years, so I had this book pre-ordered for months.

Through their network of more than 20,000 idea spotters, Springwisecollects interesting ideas globally. In this book, you’ll find 100 stories of interesting startups, initiatives and products along with useful questions for each one to get you thinking about how to take each idea and use it to inspire new ideas in your company or industry.

I would have liked to have seen more images to bring these great ideas to life a little more easily, especially in a large format sized book like this – and color would have been nice as well since I imagine this book will have applications and usage within academia as an actual text book as well.

Like with other compilation style books, this is not one that you will likely read from start to finish. Rather, you will probably look now, keep it on your bookshelf and come back to it over and over again as a resource to inspire new thinking. I’ve only had it a few months and I’m already using it that way.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Disrupt by James Bidwell

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 10: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

The last and most important book in the trilogy series that will change your career.As a fan of Dorie's first and second books, I was eager to see what ideas this new one would introduce. Positioned as the inevitable third book in her series trilogy of building your own brand and learning how to stand out, this one focuses on the all important question of how to make money. Starting with the idea of building what Dorie calls a "portfolio career," she outlines the method for how to create multiple streams of income in many different ways.

If you are a fan of books like The Automatic Customer by John Warrilow, or Mastermind Dinners by Jayson Gaignard, or Ask by Ryan Lefesque – this is a book that puts all those ideas together and wraps them into a step by step guidebook that anyone can follow.

If you have a services based business, need to build your profile or are just looking for more ways to monetize your expertise, this book is one you need to get. I have already started using some of the ideas to grow my own business, and I suspect that this book will have a similar impact for you as well. Highly recommended.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Entrepreneurial You by Dorie Clark

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 11: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A curated collection of the best ideas from every marketer’s favorite cartoonist.What happens when you combine the mind of a long suffering former corporate marketer and Harvard MBA with the keen observational skills of a comedian and cartoonist? You get this book.

If you are in business, chances are you have already seen at least one of Tom’s cartoons in a Powerpoint presentation (they are all intentionally sized to fit perfectly on a slide). Perhaps you have used one yourself in the past. His cartoons describe the unique combination of bullshit and persuasion that is modern day marketing better than almost anything else.

Reading this book is like sitting next to a hilarious friend in every boring meeting you have ever had and being entertained as he passes you one clever doodle after another describing the absurdity happening right in front of you.

I have frequently used (and paid for) his cartoons to liven up my presentations. Whether you have or haven’t, I am guessing you will now … and so the very least you could do is buy this book to support his work. The next time you’re stuck on a boring conference call, you will be happy you have it.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Your Ad Ignored Here by Tom Fishburne

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 12: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

The most entertaining book of the year, filled with surprising stories that explain the world.It took just two pages before I knew I would love this book. Part of it has to do with the beautifully constructed stories and deep insights that Harford delivers without the fluff and fanfare that so many other authors employ. Instead of lazy complexity, this book tells the underappreciated stories of everything from Barbed Wire to Shipping Containers and why exactly each shaped the world’s economy through their adoption.

Why is IKEA’s Billy bookcase so iconic? How did the invention of the Department Store help women feel more empowered? This is a book written for anyone curious about why our world economy works the way that it does. The choices for which inventions to include (Razors and Blades, Passports, Market Research) are as interesting as those that he intentionally leaves out (the Computer and Airplane, for example). This is not just a book about big inventions. Instead, it’s a tribute from a highly curious mind about the inventions that deserve more celebration for the way that they changed how we work, travel, buy, sell and transact in the modern economy. Easily my choice for the most entertaining book I read all year.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

50 Inventions That Shaped the Modern Economyby Tim Harford

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 13: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A fascinating exploration of why moments stand out and how to have (and create) more of them. Do the defining moments of our lives just happen to us or is there some pattern to why they stand out? What causes us to misremember some experiences and moments as more positive than they actually were, and others as the opposite? These are the questions the Heath brothers tackle in this new book and they are widely relevant.

Using examples ranging from a quirky California hotel with a “popsicle hotline” to a powerful idea from a high school to celebrate “signing day” when their seniors declare where they are going to college the same way we celebrate athletes getting drafted – this book does a masterful job of illustrating the wide range of moments in our lives that matter and just how much can be done to make them better.

These moments are the way that we understand big ideas, make wholesale changes, and delight in experiences. Ultimately, this book will leave you with a new found appreciation for just how important these experiences are, as well as just how much they can be shaped and improved in business if you just focus on them.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

The Power of Moments by Chip + Dan Heath

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 14: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

An idea that is actually changing the world.It is a commonly known truth among those who work in the non profit sector that the most powerful way to fight poverty is to help people lift themselves by working and having a purpose rather than giving them handouts.

This book from Samasource founder Leilah Janah offers an inside look at her personal journey to build a global organization that has given work to tens of thousands of the bottom billion poorest individuals in the world by outsourcing "good" tech jobs to them and helping train them to do them.

She writes: "Western countries have the best intentions but charity based aid often does more harm than good, and billions of people continue to suffer. Giving dignified steady fair wage work is the most effective way.“

In the book she tackles everything from how corruption impacts aid to her observation, inspired by a visit to the World Bank, that it is no longer staffed entirely with bankers.

I realize you can’t realistically describe the ideas of very many books as world changing, but this one does actually happen to fit that description.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Give Work by Leila Janah

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 15: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

For anyone who has ever wished for a script to communicate difficult ideas – this book has it.The simple idea of this book is that there are “magic words” that can have an outsized impact in how you are able to persuade and influence others to understand your point of view, sell them your ideas, or just be more respected. Reading this well laid out and simple conversation guide will offer you highly actionable tips on words and phrases to use and how to inject them into your daily interactions.

What I liked best about this book was the workbook style layout that made it immediately applicable for anyone to take a particular lesson and put it into action. Sometimes it is nice to read a book that skips the fluff and just tells you exactly what you want to know. Knowing exactly what to say obviously also means getting right to the point, and that’s what Phil does in this book.

Being persuasive is not always an easy thing to pull off. No matter if you consider yourself a gifted communicator or conversationally challenges, this is one book that will inspire you to seek out conversation just so you can try the tips for yourself.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Exactly What To Say by Phil Jones

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 16: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

Boldly tackles the timely question of how men and women can better understand each other.In the piles of books we considered this year, there were no less than a dozen focused on the female empowerment. This book is a much needed exploration of the other side: what does it mean to be a man in this changing culture?

Written by Esquire magazine contributing editor Steven Marshall along with editorial footnotes from his writer and editor wife Sarah Fulford, the book immediately tackles the idea of mansplaining and asks the relevant question of whether it is ever ok for a man to explain anything to a woman in today’s culture. How much should a man speak anyway?

This willingness to take on somewhat taboo conversations is a refreshing theme throughout this book, as Marche tackles everything from new fatherhood to the "paradox of pornography" and whether it does indeed cause more violence toward women, or whether it serves as a "substitute for rape." The answers, like the questions themselves, are elusive.

Can men and women ever truly move toward better understanding one another? That is the most important question of this book and one that I think most of us continue to seek a satisfying answer for.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

The Unmade Bed by Stephen Marche

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 17: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

Offers a look inside the most ambitious modern corporate culture transformation ever.What if working at Microsoft had a deeper meaning? In the past that might have been a laughable idea, but it anyone can do it, it might be Nadella. "We spend far too much time at work for it not to have deep meaning,” he writes. While that might seem like standard inspirational talk for a CEO, the entire first third of the book focuses on how Nadella has made it a priority to bring more empathy back to Microsoft and encourage more risk taking without fearing failure.

Grounded in his personal journey of being a father to a special needs child, the book also relays his efforts to bring mindfulness and other non-obvious leadership techniques to Microsoft’s executive team, and further down the organization. Adding credibility is Nadella’s open willingness to take an honest look even at his own missteps, including his widely criticized gaffe at a women's tech conference. While the blunder was embarrassing, Nadella proactively speaks of it in the book with an openness and vulnerability that you rarely find in executive memoirs – all of which supports the perception that this is who he really is. Humble, brave, empathetic, human and trustworthy. Hopefully he can succeed in his efforts to mold the culture of Microsoft in the same image.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Hit Refresh by Satya Nadella

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 18: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A fascinating exploration of the daily retail experience almost every other book ignores. "Grocery stores are more than just places to buy food. They are in a broader sense a reflection of our culture."

While there are plenty of books about food and health, there are very few that dig deeply into the only retail experience most of us visit more than once every week.

By following the management and staff at Heinens, a midsize Midwestern chain based in his hometown of Cleveland Ohio, the author asks the questions most of us have wondered at one point or another. The one question he tackles in particular, is whether there is some underhanded sneakiness in how the food is positioned in the grocery store in order to optimize sales.

Are sugary foods intentionally placed at eye level for toddlers to see? Is milk intentionally placed at the back of the store to encourage impulse buys? The interesting answers he gets will help you understand how your assumptions are myths and not realities of modern grocery store design.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Grocery by Michael Ruhlman

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 19: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

Much more than your average forgettable career guide from a social media influencer. There is no shortage of guide books to career and life success written by influencers whose sole career bullet point involves creating videos that have amassed millions of fans and followers. Many of them are naïve and forgettable attempts to cash in on fleeting popularity. This book is different.

The 50 chapter titles sum up the irreverent voice of the book: Don't give away all your secrets. Call yourself out. Commit to your decisions. Schedule inspiration. Not everyone hates you. Understand priorities. Be unapologetically yourself. You are a chameleon.

Ultimately what makes this collection of tips so readable and worthwhile is the authenticity of the author that comes through in her writing just as it does in her videos. The book actually feels like you're sitting down and getting advice from Singh herself, which is presumably the reason why anyone would want to read it in the first place.

This is the perfect non-obvious business book holiday gift to give the up-and coming professional in your life.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

How To Be A Bawse by Lilly Singh

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 20: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

Reveals the secret of why some large companies succeed at disruption while others fail. Just about every mature company is struggling to find the right ways to embrace disruption. Hotels worry about Airbnb. Automakers worry about ridesharing. Retailers worry about Amazon.

How can large mature organizations successfully prepare for the future? The results of a global study of more than 200 established corporations and startups that the author conducted in coordination with OgilvyRED (my former firm)*, finds the same conclusion I see with most of the organizations I work with that are successfully planning for the future.

The insight: partnership works better than acquisition. Stengel’s research found that companies with successful start up partnerships are 3 times more likely to change their culture to be more innovative than those who rely on acquisition or do nothing. Large scale mergers drive investor revenue, but do little to change culture to promotion innovation. Instead, innovation happens by starting something new from within and augmenting that by using incubators, startup partners and venture capital-style investments. *The final publication of this research was after the time that I left Ogilvy and I was not involved in this project.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Unleashing the Innovators

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 21: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A research based exploration past the hype into what actually makes anything go viral.There is plenty of advice to be had in books and online columns on what makes anything go viral, but this book is one of the most even handed explorations of how hits are actually formed.

Taking the trademark approach he also employs in his work for The Atlantic, the author takes us into the elements of what makes ideas Looking at the somewhat puzzling success of Fifty Shades of Gray, for example, offers the author a lens from which to share all the elements that went into the book’s rise – and illustrates why it was more predictable than you may realize. For anyone who is trying to create a product or idea that achieves viral success, this book will give you some techniques you can use right away.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

Hit Makers by Derek Thompson

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 22: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

OUR REVIEW:

A highly useful debunking of the most commonly heard management myths in business today.What if the management advice that you have heard for years, like maintaining an “open door policy” was actually holding you and your team back from greatness? Unlike other management books written from an academic point of view, this book is like a real life coaching session from a helpful mentor on how to create connection without becoming a magnet for drama.

If you love the workplace drama, this is not the book for you. Instead, it is written like a cross between a tough but necessary slap in the face from a brutally honest friend, and a no bullshit challenge from the toughest boss you’ve ever loved. “Your circumstances are not the reason you can’t succeed; they are the environment in which you must succeed,” writes the author. The book is filled with truisms like this which seem slightly obvious once you read them, but still no less profound.

As I read this book, I found myself making a mental list of every whiny, victimized, or entitled person I had ever worked with and wishing I would have known about this book back then. Yes, it would have been great as a gift. Even more importantly, reading this could have given me a way to deal with those colleagues more effectively.

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARD SHORTLISTED BOOK:

No Ego by Cy Wakeman

IMPACT:

ORIGINALITY:

READABILITY:

USEFULNESS:

SHAREABILITY:

Page 23: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

MOST IMPORTANT BOOK OF 2017

2017 NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOK AWARDS:

The Winners!MOST ORIGINAL

BOOK OF 2017MOST ENTERTAINING

BOOK OF 2017 MOST USEFUL BOOK OF 2017

MOST SHAREABLE BOOK OF 2017

Page 24: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

CURATED BY THE AUTHOR & TEAM BEHIND THE BEST SELLING TREND SERIESNON-OBVIOUSAWARDS

20

17 W

INN

ER

S

THE 2017 SH

ORTLIST

THE 2017 LO

NG

LIST

Page 25: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

Q: DO BOOKS PAY TO BE FEATURED ON YOUR LIST?A: Absolutely not! While we sometimes accept review copies of books or early galley editions for review, there is no outside way an author or publisher can influence which books are selected for this list. On average every year 80% of the books on this list are books purchased and not free review copies. For the others, I sometimes accept a review copy but never promise any sort of coverage or inclusion in this list as that is based purely on merit and my opinion.

Q: WHY DO YOU DO THIS LIST?A: There is no vested financial stake in any of these books for myself or my team (apart from any affiliate links to buy the books which lead back to Amazon). My team and I do this list each year because we love books and believe in their power to change the way we think.

Q: WHY DOES IT COME OUT NOW?A: Since we do the list annually, we have to wait until now. The release of our awards comes out the same week as the latest edition of Non-Obvious for two reasons. First, because the books we mention helped shape our thinking on trends for the year. Secondly, we know people love giving books as holiday gifts so we want to share some of our favorites!

Q: I’M AN AUTHOR. HOW DO I GET CONSIDERED FOR THIS LIST?A: We do accept submissions for this list – if you’d like to make a suggestion or submission, email your suggestions to [email protected] and we will add it to our list for consideration.

Q: I’M ANGRY THAT YOU MISSED [insert book title here] THIS YEAR! WHERE DO I DIRECT MY OUTRAGE?A: You can use the same email address above – and I know that with a list limited to 15 titles, many amazing books won’t make the cut. Feel free to suggest one, though, and we can certainly add it to our reading list!

MORE INFORMATION:

Frequently Asked Questions

Page 26: The Best Business Books Of 2017 | Non-Obvious Book Award Winners

ABOUT ROHIT:

Rohit Bhargava is a trend curator, marketing expert, storyteller and the Wall Street Journal best-selling author of five books. After spending 15 years leading brand strategy at two of the most respected marketing agencies in the world (Ogilvy and Leo Burnett), Rohit left the corporate world to become an entrepreneur and is currently the Chief Trend Curator of the Non-Obvious Company and the Founder of Ideapress Publishing. He teaches marketing and storytelling at Georgetown University, is a columnistfor GQ magazine in Brazil and travels the world regularly as an entertaining, humble and non-boring keynote speaker.

Contact Rohit:[email protected]

ABOUT THE NON-OBVIOUS TREND SERIES:

QUICK FACTS:WALL STREET JOURNAL BEST SELLERAXIOM AWARD WINNER (BUSINESS THEORY)8 YEARS OF ANNUAL TREND PREDICTIONS OVER 100 TRENDS PREDICTED READ BY OVER 1 MILLION PEOPLE