The Beermat Entrepreneur: Turn Your Good Idea into a Great Business
Product Description
“I recommend this to “any “aspiring entrepreneur.” “Charles Dunstone, Founder, Carphone Warehouse” So, you’re sitting in the pub with friends or colleagues and you have a brilliant idea. This time it’s really brilliant. It’s the foundation of a potentially very large and successful business. Do you just go home and leave the scrawled-on beermat in the pub? Or is this it – time to really make it happen? Problem is, you’ve no idea where to start. Who do you need… More >>
The Beermat Entrepreneur: Turn Your Good Idea into a Great Business
Tagged with: Beermat • Business • entrepreneur • good • great • Idea • into • Turn
Filed under: Entrepreneur Ideas
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I read this book on a recent cross-Atlantic flight after finding it in the pocket of the seat ahead of me. Happily I did not pay for it and left it in the pocket afterwards as well. How many people have now read that copy or parts of it and not found it worthy of keeping we’ll never know.
The book maybe of help to someone totally ignorant of even business basics but most of us will simply be embarrassed for the authors and publisher. The content is minimal and the editing atrocious.
Don’t waste your money.
Rating: 1 / 5
After living in and doing management research in Silicon Valley for the past 20 years, my first reaction to this book was: How can Americans possibly learn anything about entrepreneurship from authors based in the United Kingdom? I was wrong. This is the most concise, complete, and engaging book you can read about how to grow a company. It is also might be the only charming book on entrepreneurship ever written. The Beermat Entrepreneur trumps the competition. Southon and West dispense with the annoying hype that fills so many management books. Instead, they give sound and useable advice about what every founder can and should do to build a great company. Not only that, this concise book is a joy to read. I teach management and entrepreneurship at Stanford University, and if I were to advise an aspiring company founder in any part of the world to read just one book, this would be it.
Rating: 5 / 5
I have a business that I started myself and with the help of a great team have developed it into a successful business over the past five years. The authors view points from the startup (seedling) stage all the way to becoming a large (mighty oak) organization are very insightful and done from the perspective of someone that has truly been there and done that. Most business startup books I have read tend to take you way off base into textbook theories that is just that, theories. The Beermat Entrepreneur is for the real entrepreneur that truly wants good practical advice on how to get a business from an idea on a napkin (beermat) in the bar to a successful business.
Rating: 5 / 5
It’s been a long time since I have seen such a simplistic business book. Rigid rules about how to succeed in business always make me leery. The authors should know better than to try to apply them to business situations. The book is also unrealistic because most start-up entrepreneurs won’t be able to find a mentor to guide them through every step, procure sales for them, and introduce them to wealthy and powerful allies and investors.
The book is basically a fantasy of wishful thinking.
Rating: 1 / 5
Contrary to the first two reviews, I thought both authors did a really great job of defining the key elements for building a successful business. For once, here is a book that actually tells you the secret recipe from taking an idea, and turning that into a successful business. Everyone who knows Mike Southon and his success in selling his company to what is now Cap Gemini Ernst & Young will tell you that book is full of substance. If you’re an aspiring entrepreneur like myself, I would encourage you should get your hands on this book!
Rating: 5 / 5