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K**I
Life changing
I've read dozens and dozens of business book and have a masters degree in management. This is by far the best business book I've read.If I were to list the top 5 books, the other 4 would be2nd 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey.3rd equal Unlimited Power by Tony Robbins and Maximum Achievement by Brian Tracy5th Billionaire in Training by Brad SugarsThis book led me to a stock that grew 15x in less than two and a half years.Are you tired of the grind and believing that the way to double your results is to double your working hours? In this book Richard Koch teaches a different path, an easier but much more fruitful path. For the self employed after reading the Star Principle I also strongly recommend reading 80/20 Sales and Marketing: The definitive guide to working less and making more by Perry Marshall.I see some reviewers try to list the Star Principle by outlying two key points from the book. If you think knowing those two points negates the need to read this book then you will be shortchanging yourself, your spouse and your children. For a primer about "The Star Principle" see this interview with the author in youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCPH045f9-I.This book is gold, don't dally around, add this book to your cart right now and change your career, business and/or investment results. And therefore have more time and better quality time with your family as a result, which are life's true riches, aren't they?
C**Y
Be a fly on the wall of a phenomenally successful business consultant.
What if you could be a fly on the wall of a successful business consultant who had consistently out-batted other consultants. What is it about how they think that meant that they could *know* with a strong sense of confidence whether a project would work or not? That is what this book gives you.This book is simple enough for anyone to understand, but has all the elements required to make it useful for the serious student looking to make their venture successful.It is put together like a template to help you first learn how to spot star ventures and then know which of your alternatives are most likely to work. If you realise your plan is shaky, it helps you detect if you can tweak your plan to make it more likely to succeed.The chapters are thoughtfully ordered in the steps you go through to compile your strategy, and peppered with real life examples to help round out your understanding.Another thing I like about this approach, is the fact that it does not just apply to big scale investing in companies (where the author made his money), but also can be applied in many other areas of your life beyond investing (i.e. it is Fractal): Are you looking to start your own company? - Are you developing new products or services for an existing operation? Are you looking for a department or company to work for? In all cases this book can help you. For example, Richard underlines many benefits of just finding and working in a Star company that had not occurred to me.My only criticism is the choice of title; With so many get rich quick fads/products, the use of the phrase "How it Can Make You Rich" in the title may put some people off. It may lead you mistakenly to believe that you need some kind of special skills to make the information inside work. It does not, but it does require you to look at situations differently.This book is almost certainly going to become required reading on business school reading lists, as it gives you the 20% of strategy you need to know without filling your head with a bunch of other needless analysis tools.I do not understand why more people are not raving about it already.P.S. when reading the kindle version on a laptop computer (using http://read.amazon.com), some of the bulleted lists the text is a bit small, however this is a small formatting issue which may have been corrected by the time you read this. The same issue is *not* present when using a kindle on a tablet or phone.
K**S
Thought provoking and Useful
One of the things I have been sucked into, is the hard work ethic rather than choosing what to work hard at.We are exhorted to be action takers rather than strategists, and feel guilty if we are not doing something. Or is this just me?This book really reinforced why it is important to spend the time strategically choosing what to get involved in in the first place, and some very useful criteria on how to choose successfully. Also plenty of examples on the application and meaning of these criteria.If you can get to the point of being able to see patterns in the chaos, then this shows you how to evaluate them.I have read two other books by Richard Koch and each time I come away thinking I knew all there is to know about 80/20. Until I read the next one and realise the other time/two times I was mistaken :)
S**N
Well written and provides good food for life and the mind
Well written and provides good food for life and the mind. Gives a clearer perspective on the Pareto law of 80% / 20% where the best in life comes from 20% of your efforts, friendships, work, happiness and across the board. All children should understand the principles early in life, same for all adults eager to give themselves, their families and their friends a helpful edge.
M**Y
Star book
Hugely valuable for anyone interested in a simple yet robust way of evaluating if a business is worth investing in. It could be one of the books that pivots you into a life changing course in your work and investment strategy.
W**M
A Star Indeed!
Simple but great and practical topic. A must Read with real-life examples of how to choose a winning company whether you’re investing or just looking for a great company to work for
D**)
Work hard? No thanks. Work smart. That's what counts.
Work hard? No thanks. Work smart. That's what counts. Why fight gravity going for small fish when you can get exponentially more value out of a company that is moving up aggressively? That's the message here. I use this same principle in the stock market. Go with what is moving, ahead of the pack.
J**F
I love it, it’s like a hyper Growth Radar
Very good summary of how to spot a company in early stages that will take off with fast growth
P**R
Putting strategy into owning, investing or working in a business
In 1970, the Boston Consulting Group publicised a two-by-two matrix that became very famous in the business world and is known as the Growth-Share matrix.Based on ratings on high and low across two dimensions, market growth rate and market share of a particular firm, it creates four categorisations:1) High-high = Star2) High share - low growth = Cash Cow3) Low share - high growth = Question mark or problem child4) Low - low = DogThis book takes a detailed look at what it takes to find a star business to work in, to invest in or to own and how it can lead to exciting times and LOTS of money.The Growth Share Matrix was originally developed to guide top down centralised planning of business units within groups. As such, it quickly became discredited because it glossed over too many issues. However I agree with the author, as a tool for looking at individual businesses, especially before you get involved, it's very useful.The issues lie in how confident you can be about:1) Looking into the future to correctly determine long term growth prospects. The compounding effects over say 10 years make a huge difference if growth is 30% per annum compared to 10%. (A million turnover business that grows at 10% reaches £2.59 million at the end, but if it grows at 30%, it reaches £13.8 million in the 10 years).2) Whether market share leadership can be maintained many years into the future. One problem is that the faster the market niche grows and the bigger it gets, the more likely it is to gain the attention of big firms with deep pockets.There aren't many star businesses like Google and Amazon that go from strength to strength. Often high early growth can tail off as the market matures and the business drifts into the Cash Cow category. There can still be a very good business but, if you're investing late in the process, it won't justify sky-high price-earnings (P/E) ratios over the long term and while profits continue to increase, the share price may reduce as the P/E multiple reduces.As an investment philosophy therefore, great care needs to be taken to avoid being sucked into a value trap.I find myself in two minds about the approach depending on which of my two main hats I wear.As a business coach to small businesses, I think it's a terrific book for helping you to think about starting in a particular niche or whether you should continue with a struggling business.As an investor, I have a personal bias towards value investing in profitable, cash positive businesses that are under-valued by the market. These will normally be cash cows and even dogs rather than stars. Question marks are even more speculative and risky. Big money can be made moving one into the Star category by gaining market leadership but it's a big gamble, especially looking in from the outside where you can be manipulated by hype. I therefore worry that this book can tempt you into making investment decisions that are based more on hope than reality.Paul Simister, a business coach who helps business owners who are stuck, get unstuck.
S**H
What makes a successful business - and what makes a failure? This book gives you the formula.
Richard Koch was worth over a quarter of a billion dollars a few years ago, and is undoubtedly worth more now - so obviously he didn't write this "How to get rich" book to get rich. This shares his simple formula for deciding where to invest his own time and money - and shows how it has worked to make him (and several other people too) very rich. At about 10 times the success rate of other venture capitalists, Koch is giving the formula for his success away for a few dollars and a few hours of your time. Koch believes that you or I can use his formula to get rich too. Or at the very least to make our own success much more likely, and require a lot less effort - even as an employee.If your business is not in a market that is growing at more than 10% per year, and if you are not the market leader, then you are probably in the wrong business and are working much harder than your leading competitor(s) to get smaller returns. Read this book to find out how to swim with the tide instead of against it, and how to fix your business if you cannot leave it.Whether you are an investor, entrepreneur, or employee, this book will open your eyes. Once you read it you cannot go back to fooling yourself that "great idea" will succeed, unless it fits Koch's criteria for a star business.
M**S
Extremely helpful
This is not your ordinary business book. It dispels a lot of myths about how to create a successful star business
M**E
Where have you been all my life!
What a refreshing read. I wish I had read this book years ago. It's all in the stars. Please excuse as I go create my star!
K**N
Five Stars
great product as described, great service, fast delivery. would recommend highly A+++
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