Archive for the ‘Book Briefs’ Category

Book Brief: Turbo Growth by Travis Ray Chaney

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Book Number 3 on my Book-a-Week list for 2011 – Turbo Growth by Travis Chaney

 

Travis Chaney totally ROCKS! His work is amazing. His book is amazing. I have had the pleasure of getting to know Travis personally over the last few months, and each time we talk, he impresses me more with his knowledge, his leadership, his incredible results, his giant heart, and his undying passion for helping financial advisors achieve their dreams.

Travis’ mantra is “Be bullish on life!” and that describes Travis to the core.

In the opening pages of the book, Travis describes how to use it as a “playbook” and how throughout the book he will help you shift your thinking from trying to make money to adding value to the lives of the people you work with. And isn’t that what we all want? For our lives to have meaning and our work to add value to others? Of course, we also want to make money. Travis’ book describes how in the process of truly understanding what it means to add value to people’s lives in your own authentic way, you will also figure out how to make more money than you’ve ever made before. And he has years of results with many highly successful clients to prove it.

The book is very easy to read and absorb because of the way Travis organized the themes in each chapter: Core Concepts, Turbo Growth Moments, Mind the Mindset, Drew to the Rescue!, The Turbo Growth Training Guide, and at the end of the book, a “Ten Minute Turbo Growth Refresher Course” summarizing all the key concepts in the book. Each chapter also includes the continuing saga of “Andy the Advisor”, a struggling advisor who makes many of the common mistakes Travis sees in the clients he coaches. Andy’s character is so true-to-life that you really feel his pain, and I almost immediately found myself wanting to shout words of encouragement and advice to him. I looked forward to each chapter, in large part to find out what Andy was up to and whether he could figure out how to turn his life around!

Travis’ wisdom and practical exercises throughout the book make it a must read for every financial advisor, no matter what their experience or level of success in the career. And even if you aren’t a financial advisor, but simply want to raise the level of your game – and who doesn’t? – you will find this book extraordinarily inspiring.

In the words of Siskel and Ebert, I give this book two thumbs way, way UP!!

Click here to order the book

Book Brief: The Power of Who by Bob Beaudine

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Book Number 1 on my Book-a-Week list for 2011 – The Power of Who by Bob Beaudine

 

Bob Beaudine is President and CEO of Eastman and Beaudine, an executive search firm in the Dallas area geared towards sports and entertainment. Beaudine’s book promo video states his message perfectly, “You’ve got WHO!” So many of us spend so much time trying to cultivate new relationships that will get us the next client or the next job. We join clubs, attend networking meetings and schedule 1:1s with people, forgetting that the most important relationships are the ones we already have! The people who will help us most are the people who know us best and care the most about us. He shares a big personal realization that prompted him to write his book: He did an analysis of the connections that helped him get business over a ten year period.  Of 5,100 connections in his database, he got ten years of business from only 87 of them!

I haven’t yet done this type of analysis of my business, and I don’t have nearly the number of contacts in my database that Beaudine has, but I suspect an analysis of where my clients have come from would yield similar findings. And what his book made me realize is that I want to do an even better job cultivating those professional and personal relationships that mean the most to me. Asking how I can help those people, asking what is important to them, connecting them with people they can help and who can help them, sharing my vision and goals with them so they know how to connect me. That sounds a lot more fun than racing around trying to attend every possible meeting I can to connect with new people. Not that I don’t believe in networking; it’s an important part of building a business. But whatever the method of connecting, it needs to be purposeful to make a difference in my business. And I plan to make all my connecting more purposeful this year.

Great book, easy read, and while in many ways a “one message” book, it is still worth the read for all the great stories and reinforcement Beaudine shares. I highly recommend it!

Click here to order the book on Amazon

A Book a Week!

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

If you read my January newsletter, you know that I have set a goal to read a book a week in 2011. Four weeks in and so far I’m meeting the goal! This is such an energizing goal for me as I really love to read and learn. Last year was very filled with writing and publishing my book and speaking opportunities centered around promoting it, that I didn’t make time to read as I typically do. I realized during my end-of-year reflection that I really missed regular reading and the inspiration it brings.

I sort of feel like “Julie” of Julie and Julia, who set a goal to cook all of Julia Child’s recipes in a year. I’m excited about the challenge and what I’ll learn in the process, eager to share what I will learn, and a little nervous about the pressure I’m putting on myself to reach this goal. Thanks to Bob Beaudine, author of The Power of Who – the first book I read this year – for giving me the idea to read a book a week.

If you’re wondering how I’m having the time to do this, it’s not as hard as it sounds. I’ve often shared with my clients and speaking audiences that reading ten minutes a day will result in reading a book a month. That insight came to me from a book – no surprise! – by David Cottrell called Monday Morning Leadership. If you don’t believe me, think about it. Most books have about 200 pages. If you read ten minutes a day, you are reading about 8-10 pages, and if you read every day, even just week days, you will read about 200 pages a month. So if you read about 40 minutes a day, you can read a book a week.

Here’s how I’m doing it: My morning exercise routine includes twenty minutes on the recumbent bike, which leaves my hands free to read. Over lunch, which, since I work out of my house, is usually at the kitchen table between client calls, I read another ten minutes. In the evening I read another ten, and there’s my forty.

Titles I’ve completed so far, four weeks into the new year, include:

  • The Power of Who by Bob Beaudine
  • The Gift in You by Caroline Leaf
  • Turbo Growth by Travis Chaney
  • Now Discover Your Strengths by Donald O. Clifton and Marcus Buckingham (a book I’d read in pieces before but thoroughly enjoyed re-reading cover to cover, especially given my Reason Why YOU ROCK! passion which ties directly to my mission of Inspiring Leaders to Realize Their Greatness).

Additionally, I’ve finished a couple of books I started reading last year:

  • The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein (a terrific novel written in the voice of a dog, which was great especially given our new status as dog-owners)
  • The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle, which is one of the most impactful spiritual guides I have ever read, and which I will start reading again next week. I find it to be very helpful to read a few pages of this every day.

I’ll be writing short blogs about all of the books, to help me capture what I learned, and, I hope, to spark interest in my readers in a book that may inspire them as it has inspired me.

Here’s to joyful reading!

My 2011 goal to read a book a week!

Monday, January 24th, 2011

If you read my January newsletter, you’ll know that I’m attempting to read a book a week this year. Third week of the year and so far I’m on track, which feels great! If you count the two books I also finished that I had already started, I’m actually up to five for the year. It’s really fun and enlightening to be reading this much, and I’m looking forward to posting some book briefs – not real reviews because I don’t plan to summarize the whole book. Just want to share some of the key insights that were meaningful to me. Stay tuned…