quarta-feira, 17 de maio de 2017

Dories's Clark books

Dorie Clarrk
Reading business books was crucial in accelerating my learning, and helping me
become a better entrepreneur. These are the books I consider to be foundational, and
which I refer to again and again. Hope you enjoy.

How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott Adams. A charming,
contrarian, and fascinating success ‘how to’ (or ‘how not to’) memoir by the creator of Dilbert. This is one of the best books of business stories I’ve read. His periodic allusions to “hitting the diversity ceiling” in corporate America make him sound like a whiner, but beyond that, the book is a gem.
Choose Yourself by James Altucher. This isn’t a business advice book, per se, but more an engaging memoir of business ups-and-downs. Altucher is a beautiful copywriter (study his writing style – you can’t put it down) and disarmingly honest about his life and struggles, which has served him very well in business.
Influence by Robert Cialdini. This is the classic on persuasion – beautifully written and chock full of blow-your-mind facts. Everyone needs to read it.
Pre-Suasion by Robert Cialdini. This is a companion volume to Influence, and a
substantial contribution to understanding how to make influence work for you in the moments before you make the ask.
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey. This is a classic for good reason. You’ll learn important and perennially useful concepts like “start with the end in mind” and the importance of “sharpening the saw.”
Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think. by Peter Diamandis and Steven Kotler. A fascinating look at future trends and why they’re so hard to spot. This has philosophical implications for all of our business ventures, as well.
Sell Your Book Like Wildfire by Rob Eagar. If you’re marketing a book, Rob’s advice is spot on, and smarter than what most in-house marketers at publishing houses will tell you.
Never Eat Alone by Keith Ferrazzi. The best book on networking I’ve ever read. Well worth your time.
The E-Myth Revisited by Michael Gerber. The classic small business book, providing the useful concept of “working on” your business (i.e., systematizing), rather than “working in” your business (i.e., doing all the stuff yourself and getting overloaded so you can’t grow). I learned a lot from this book.
Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. This is the book that popularized Anders Ericsson’s
famous “10,000 Hour Rule” of expertise. It’s referred to so often in business circles, you ought to read it.
The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell. Same goes for this one. It’s part of the cultural fabric now.
Made to Stick by Dan and Chip Heath. Consider this a follow-on or companion volume to The Tipping Point. The Heath brothers take Gladwell’s 30,000 foot perspective and try to make it actionable for business leaders and entrepreneurs.
Getting to Plan B by Randy Komisar and John Mullins. A look at how startups pivot by a well known Silicon Valley VC and a British professor. Chock full of interesting case studies you can learn from, both regarding your business and your overall professional life.
Ask by Ryan Levesque. A deep dive on survey methodology. That may sound dry, but it’s an essential skill when it comes to understanding your customers.
11 Rules for Creating Value in the Social Era by Nilofer Merchant. This short book is a great primer on the future of the economy and important trends like the sharing economy, crowdfunding, etc. It will make you look at your business, and your business model, in new ways.
Power: Why Some People Have It and Others Don’t by Jeffrey Pfeffer. Pfeffer is
Stanford business school professor who provides a clear and smart roadmap for how to win at office politics and successfully navigate other people’s pettiness.
The Lean Startup by Eric Ries. This book is read by every startup aspirant these days, and with good reason. His concepts, such as the ‘minimum viable product,’ have become a very useful framework in how to launch a product quickly and cheaply to establish demand, before you go all in. A nice companion to Peter Sims’ book below. 
Just Start by Leonard Schlesinger, Charles Kiefer, and Paul Brown. A great
entrepreneurship primer for when you’re overthinking things. They remind you that taking action of some kind, no matter how small, is the necessary ingredient.
Little Bets by Peter Sims. A look at how to experiment in small and strategic ways, without putting yourself or your company at too much risk.
The Education of a Value Investor by Guy Spier. It’s nominally a book about investing, but it’s actually about business ethics and what careers and lives should be made of.
Launch by Jeff Walker. If you plan to do internet marketing, Jeff Walker sets the
standard. Many people have copied him, with greater or lesser success, but it’s worth consulting the original and determining which pieces to keep or reject.

terça-feira, 16 de maio de 2017

Strategic Sector Routes 2025 Ceará Brazil

The Strategic Sector Routes — 2025 is an initiative of the FIEC System which aims at drafting Roadmaps, i.e., maps defining routes to be covered in order to achieve, in up to 10 years, the potential perceived in each of the sectors and areas identified in the Sectors Bringing Future Prospects, considered to be the most promising for Ceará’s industry within the 2025 horizon.

Link FIEC - Strategic Sector Routes 2025

Rotas Estratégicas Setoriais

O projeto Rotas Estratégicas Setoriais tem o objetivo de construir coletivamente, com especialistas da academia, setor produtivo e governo, caminhos possíveis de desenvolvimento para os segmentos e áreas estratégicos, com a identificação de entraves existentes, ações resolutivas estratégicas e tecnologias-chaves para a competitividade do setor, ilustrados em roadmaps.
Os 17 setores e áreas priorizados como Setores Estratégicos para o Ceará foram organizados em 13 Rotas Estratégicas:
  • Água - Painel realizado
  • Biotecnologia - Painel realizado
  • Construção e Minerais Não Metálicos - Painel realizado
  • Economia Criativa e Turismo - Painel realizado
  • Economia do Mar - Painel realizado
  • Energia - Painel realizado e publicação entregue
  • Industria Agroalimentar - Painel realizado
  • Logística - Painel realizado e publicação entregue
  • Meio Ambiente - Painel realizado
  • Eletrometalmecânico - Painel realizado e publicação entregue
  • Produtos de Consumo: Couro & Calçados; Confecções; Madeira & Móveis  - Painel realizado
  • Saúde - Painel realizado
  • Tecnologia da Informação & Comunicação - TIC - Painel realizado

quarta-feira, 10 de maio de 2017

Books that Changed My Perspective

I was wondering if you had any suggestions for books you’ve read that really impacted your life/career?

I need to show some restraint in answering this because I could go on for hours talking about books. As I said a few weeks agoI’m learning to shift my perspective on the value of reading from How many books did I finish? toHow much do I retain from each book? Towards that goal, here are my top reads as measured by how often I recall or reference something from that book. (Of course, there is definitely some recency bias here!)
  1. Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck: oh look, another reference to Mindset! Didn’t I talk about this last week? And the week before that? And the month before that? I read this about two years ago and I credit this book with completely changing my relationship with feedback and my personal level of confidence. We humans are capable of extraordinary things, but the biggest blocker we must overcome is our own mindset.
  2. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Harari: growing up, I always thought history was a boring and useless subject. There were names and dates to recite, events to put in order, and people to do long reports about. Sapiens is the history textbook I wish I had instead — rich, fascinating, thought-provoking, and a love letter to why understanding the past helps us better understand our present and future. There are a thousand wonderful things I learned from this book, but the one I think about every day is the power of narratives and how our collective ability as humans to invent and believe these narratives made us the powerhouse species we are today.
  3. The Design of Everyday Things by Don Norman: This is the first design book I ever read and its approachable, funny, and pragmatic lessons have deeply shaped my beliefs on what it means to be a designer. I wrote an ode to design last year where the lessons from this book featured prominently. It was through Don Norman that I first realized design was foremost about function. Whether you have a good or bad experience interacting with anything made by human hands, blame it (or credit it) on the designer. It is our responsibility.
  4. Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman: This one technically shouldn’t be on my list because I haven’t finished it yet — I’m about two-thirds done. But I have been reading it on and off for the past year and every time I graze a few pages, I learn something new. If you want a deep look into human psychology in all its wonders and irrationalities, look no further. I often find myself thinking about some of the implications in my day-to-day — do I only believe this because the narrative is solid in my mind, or do we actually have enough evidence? Can this hard decision actually can be made with expertise, or are we trying to give ourselves too much credit for our ability to sway the future? Are we sticking with the status quo because we are averse to risk or is the better decision to bite the bullet on this change? This book is a bit of a denser read (hence my slow progress) but I’ve loved every bit so far.
  5. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo: I love this book for its practical advice — how to fold socks! How to think about what books and documents you actually need! How to deal with sentimental items! — but what I truly appreciate about it are the principles behind the advice which apply to more than just tidying. Surround yourself with what you love. Get rid of everything that doesn’t bring you joy. Appreciate things. Every January for the past two years, friends know I embark on a yearly “Cleanuary” to declutter our home and it’s a ritual that feels just right in ushering in the new year.
  6. High Output Management by Andy Grove: my favorite management book. I first read it four years ago. Last year I re-read it and got more out of it the second time around. Andy Grove lays out the principles behind good management and they are timeless: How do you measure a manager’s success? How should you approach org-building? What, exactly, is management? The wisdom per page in this short book is remarkable.
  7. Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg: to be honest, I didn’t think much about my gender before reading this book. Despite being a rare female in my computer science department and in my workplace, I purposefully tried to ignore the fact that I was in the minority in order to not draw attention to myself. Reading Lean In and learning of all the research around women and leadership in regards to ambition and likability was incredibly sobering. But it made me realize the importance of a few things: I should aim higher; I should surround myself with female role models, and I should do what I can to help other women because the odds are currently stacked against us.
  8. Fiction Bonus! Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo: I’m unabashedly a part of a young adult fiction book club, so if there’s a fantasy, sci-fi, dystopian, or historical novel that features teen protagonists called to save the world under extraordinary circumstances, I’m there. This is my favorite series in recent memory. It’s two books long and features the most lovable band of crooked thieves you will ever meet attempting a heist that is equal parts madness, redemption and glory. Just pure, wonderful storytelling and a rollicking good time.
  9. Fonte: medium.com