Book Review: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615458059): Guy Kawasaki, Paul Boehmer: Books
Book Review: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615458059): Guy Kawasaki, Paul Boehmer: Books
Old fluff put in an entertaining format.,
By Jerry Saperstein (Evanston, IL USA) -
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Hardcover)
Guy Kawasaki is a genuinely warm, engaging, intelligent and articulate man. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting him several times at MacWorld trade shows.
However, Guy Kawasaki is a career self-promoter. He has made a living for many years repackaging standard business advice in an entertaining format and peddling it as new to the legions of people seeking a business success formula.
More power to Guy for making a living at it, but it doesn’t alter the nature of what is between the covers here: old advice, with a lot of it being nothing more than commensense.
Two irritating things about Guy’s otherwise excellent writing style. He has a real problem with gender pronouns. Even in academic writing that tends to be excruciatingly politically correct, I’ve never seen anyone go to such extremes in using “she”, “her” and other feminine pronouns. It’s creepy, weird and utterly unnecessary. Certainly She would understand if Guy backed off a bit. Then there is Guy’s cuteness with a couple of euphemisms: for example, he takes the common expletive for bull manure and adds “-takke” to it. Once may cute, especially among your 4th grade classmates. A couple of dozen times and it is truly annoying and leads you to believe the author may be a fourth grader.
As for Guy’s advice . . . well, there’s a reason why so many self-help and business success books are perennial bestsellers: people want guidance and advice And guy provides it in a witty, entertaining manner.
But virtually all of it has been served up hundreds, if not thousands, of times before by other authors. Some of what Guy offers up is pure nonsense without a shred of evidence to support it: it is just politically correct, like his overuse of the feminine. For example, he directs that companies “diversify” in their hiring, implying that if your workforce isn’t statistically proportionate, you are doomed to an early end in a “Bozo Explosion”. While it may be politically correct, the proposition is not supported by evidence.
Straining for material, Kawasaki resorts to interviews with other authors and academics, not a few of whom are cranks. One parses a conspiracy theory that would give a tinfoil hat wearer a run for their money.
Finally, Kawasaki tries to cover the waterfront with his advice. And the plains. And the mountains too. And the oceans. Everything. If you’re looking for millions to start your company, Kawasaki has advice. If you’re looking for a job, Kawasaki has advice. If you’re the boss of a successful company, Kawasaki has advice.
The quality of the advice in every area, however, is suspect. First, much of it is common sense. If you have to buy as book to learn common sense, you have a problem. A lot of what Guy writes has been written about a zillion times before.
Take, for example, some of his advice about getting a job in Silicon Valley. Show up early, Guy says. “Get to your interview at least thirty minutes early because (a) you might hit traffic . . .” Actually, I think Guy means to say leave for your interview early because you might hit traffic, if She is not watching over you. Point is, who needs to buy a book to learn this? I love this line: “Answer the first question “How are you?” with a great response. For example, a great response is, “I feel great. I’m really anxious to learn more about this job and tell you about myself, so that we can determine if we’re a good match”. Very impressive: I’m sure the interviewer will be bowled over by your sincerity.
As one of his later chapters, Guy has one entitled “Are You an Egomaniac?” I think Guy is - and he appears to make a good living from it.
On the whole, ‘Reality Check” is no worse than then some advice books and perhaps is valuable to simply reassure people that common sense is still a valuable commodity. But for business success tips, Guy doesn’t offer anything you haven’t seen before. I’d suggest holding off on this one until it is remaindered or just get it from the library.
Jerry
An Authentic Tretise on the World of Work and Business,
By Ivana S. Taylor “Ivana Taylor” (Medina, OH) -
This review is from: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Hardcover)
Guy Kawasaki is an evangelist. He can’t help himself. Thank God.
I, too, was one of the Twitter people who got a preview of the book in digital form and literally laughed out loud — at the local coffee shop - yeah, I looked stupid. But it was worth it.
I thought it was going to be a short book. At least it seemed that way because I flew through the digital version fairly quickly. So when I saw how big it was (460 pages, 94 Chapters - each one is just a couple pages long - so don’t freak out) I thought I’d never get through it. But can I just tell you that it is BY FAR the most entertaining, informative, true-to-life rant on what’s good and bad about the world of entrepreneurship, business, presentations - and more.
All the things everyone of us has wanted to say out loud - but has never had he guts is in there. I have so many favorite chapters I don’t know where to begin.
Since I have this rule about NOT working with A-holes, I’ll start with that one. (That would be Chapter 87, pg. 401) First he describes an A-hole (so you can test to see if you are one), then he goes on to outline some quick and easy strategies of dealing with A-Holes - and so on.
Other favorite chapters are the one’s I’ve themed as “Lies.” Throughout the book Guy outlines the Lies different groups tell each other: Lies CEO’s tell, Lies Venture Caps Tell, Lies Entrepreneurs tell. These are rants to be sure - but what makes this book so utterly wonderful is that Kawasaki tells you how to avoid them and how to set yourself up for success — please, for everyone’s sake (I can almost hear him say)
In the preview version (I’m not sure where it is in the big book - perhaps it was edited) he basically says that VC’s are sick of people asking for money when they haven’t already gotten customers (just promises). The quote went something like “Just once I’d love to have someone ask for money so they can expand and grow because they have too many customers and are out of capacity.”
See what I mean? The language is so simple. The message so true and so real, that even I can remember something I glanced over MONTHS ago.
To me, that’s the sign of a great book.
And now, a confession. I didn’t want to like Guy Kawasaki - or his book. I don’t go for all this web and book celebrity stuff. Everything is so automated and fake anymore, I guess I’m getting cynical. But Guy Kawasaki practices what he preaches. He connects, he participates and he is good at what he does - and doesn’t see why the rest of us can’t be good as well.
Like I said Guy Kawasaki is an evangelist — and a good one too.
Truth, Wisdom and Humor - Guy Kawasaki’s Best Book Yet,
By Jonathan Fields “Career Renegade” (NYC) -
This review is from: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Hardcover)
Rare is the time I pick up a nearly 500 page book on business that’s keeps me up reading after everyone in the house has already gone to bed. But, with Reality Check, Guy’s hit a home run.
Truth - I’ve read hundreds of books on entrepreneurship, marketing, careers, yadda, yadda, yadda. Heck, I’ve even written one of my own (Career Renegade: How to Make a Great Living Doing What You Love). And, you can pretty much tell within the first 20 pages the difference between books written by people who’ve “studied” entrepreneurship and those written by people who’ve “lived” it.
The first offer great advice…that works in a vacuum. The latter reveal what it’s really all about. They speak the truth, based on what the writer has lived and breathed. As a lifetime entrepreneur and writer, that’s the book I want to read. And, that’s the book Guy has delivered.
Wisdom - 461 friggin’ pages of it…and it’s not 300 pages of juicy stuff and 161 pages of self-serving fluff. It’s ALL juice! What do I mean by that? It’s not about theory. Reality Check delivers you into the conversations, presentations, strategy sessions, critical decisions and actions that nearly every budding entrepreneur wrestles with.
Then, Guy serves up actionable, specific, aggressive do’s, don’ts, tips, tasks, strategies and scripts based on real live experience sitting on both sides of the funding table, the boardroom table, the podium…and the plywood garage table.
I stopped taking notes and dog-earing pages when I realized I was doing it on every page!
Style & Humor - If you’re looking for dry, professorial, textbook style writing…go away, that’s not Guy’s style. And thank God for that. Like all of Guy’s books, this one is irreverent, edgy and engaging. And, Guy sense humor really comes through in this one, too. Enough to keep a 500 page tome fresh to the end. In fact, the Foreword 2.0, written by Dan Lyons a/k/a Fake Steve Jobs, had me laughing out loud and e-mailing people to strong-arm them into buying the book just to read the intro.
Look, you can keep reading reviews or you can just buy the darn book now. Which you choose will very likely determine whether you’re a real entrepreneur…or you just like reading what people who write about them think.
Search Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615458059): Guy Kawasaki, Paul Boehmer: Books from AmAzon
[asa]1615458050[/asa]
Related posts:
- Book Review: The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Guy Kawasaki, Paul Boehmer: Books Book Review: The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Guy Kawasaki, Paul Boehmer: BooksLight a fire under your business, By Meryl K. Evans “Content Maven behind meryl.net” (Plano, TX) - (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) [...]...
- Book Review: The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615457465): Don Miguel Ruiz, Peter Coyote: Books Book Review: The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615457465): Don Miguel Ruiz, Peter Coyote: BooksA Must-Have Book If You Want To Be Free, By Janet Boyer “JanetBoyer.com” (Pennsylvania) - (TOP 50 REVIEWER) This review [...]...
- Book Review: Stuff White People Like: The Definitive Guide to the Unique Taste of Millions (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615457571): Christian Lander, Victor Bevine: Books Book Review: Stuff White People Like: The Definitive Guide to the Unique Taste of Millions (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615457571): Christian Lander, Victor Bevine: BooksA Laugh Out Loud (or Secretly Snicker) Book About Human Foibles, By Grady Harp (Los Angeles, CA United States) - (TOP 10 REVIEWER) [...]...
- Book Review: The First Paul: Reclaiming the Radical Visionary Behind the Church’s Conservative Icon (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781608479979): John Dominic Crossan, Mel Foster: Books Book Review: The First Paul: Reclaiming the Radical Visionary Behind the Church’s Conservative Icon (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781608479979): John Dominic Crossan, Mel Foster: BooksNice introduction to Paul, By Timothy Essex (Philadelphia, PA) - This review is from: The [...]...
- Book Review: When Organizing Isn’t Enough: Shed Your Stuff, Change Your Life (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Julie Morgenstern, Karen White: Books Book Review: When Organizing Isn’t Enough: Shed Your Stuff, Change Your Life (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Julie Morgenstern, Karen White: BooksShedding Stuff and Getting a Life, By Terri Rice “ricepaper” (Pasco, WA United States) - This review is from: [...]...
- Book Review: Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Mary Roach, Shelly Frasier: Books Book Review: Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Mary Roach, Shelly Frasier: BooksDeath is not the end, By Jeff Topham “jtopham” (Louisville, KY USA) - This review is from: Stiff: The Curious Lives of [...]...
- Book Review: The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781607758242): Ken Robinson: Books Book Review: The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781607758242): Ken Robinson: BooksInspiring, Enlightening, Informative–Read It and Then Put the Advice Into Action!, By christinemm - The Thinking Mother (Connecticut, United States) - (TOP 500 REVIEWER) [...]...
- Book Review: A Little Bit Wicked (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615459780): Kristin Chenoweth: Books Book Review: A Little Bit Wicked (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781615459780): Kristin Chenoweth: BooksGreat Memoir!, By tvtv3 “tvtv3″ (Sorento, IL United States) - (TOP 500 REVIEWER) This review is from: A Little Bit Wicked: Life, Love, and Faith in Stages (Hardcover) [...]...
- Book Review: No Angel: My Harrowing Undercover Journey to the Inner Circle of the Hells Angels (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Jay Dobyns, Mel Foster: Books Book Review: No Angel: My Harrowing Undercover Journey to the Inner Circle of the Hells Angels (Playaway Adult Nonfiction): Jay Dobyns, Mel Foster: BooksA Raw, Real and Riveting Memoir, By Michele Cozzens “www.michelecozzens.com” (Cloud - (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) This [...]...
- Book Review: How We Decide (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781441803603): Johah Lehrer, David Colacci: Books Book Review: How We Decide (Playaway Adult Nonfiction) (9781441803603): Johah Lehrer, David Colacci: BooksDisappointing addition to existing literature, good intro if new to the field, By Sreeram Ramakrishnan (Yorktown Heights, NY) - (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) This review is from: How [...]...



