About
All Feedback (1,172)
- m***o (183)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseItem as described, very well packaged, great communication from seller, item was sent right away. Highly recommend.
- dandt_store (349)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseHope to deal with you again. Thank you.
- ulongxiangji (931)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseGood Buyer,Thank you for your support. Look forward to your next visit.
- superhedcase1 (2560)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- buildersdream (9505)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- sunlu_official_store (16392)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
Reviews (30)
15 Oct, 2010
Superb
"All the good stuff and none of the fluff" -- Richard Schulze, founder and chairman, Best Buy
A wealth of information to be read and digested, then kept within arm's reach for further reference down the road. -- Business Lexington
A wealth of information to be read and digested, then kept within arm’s reach for further reference down the road. -- Business Lexington
Get your hands on it before your competitors do! -- Michael Coles, president and CEO, Caribou Coffee
Loaded with insights and strategies . . . dealing with real-world situations and solutions that most small firms face. -- Miami Herald
Loaded with insights and strategies…dealing with real-world situations and solutions that most small firms face. -- Miami Herald
Packed with road-tested tips and real-world success strategies. -- Mary Brainerd, president and CEO, HealthPartners
The best business management guide on the market. It should be required reading at every business school. -- Rinaldo S. Brutoco, president, World Business Academy
Tom Gegax has mastered the art of business...
19 Oct, 2010
Superb!
Prepare to Be a Millionaire is a good book for business school students and entrepreneurs who want to learn about proven strategies from people who have reached millionaire status.
The book offers an inside look at how millionaires in seven different industries (Internet marketing, real estate, inventions, products and manufacturing, service, food service, and arts and entertainment) achieved success and millionaire status.
Through question and answer sessions and step-by-step blueprints, the millionaires will teach you how you can become a millionaire too. They give detailed information on funding, marketing, manufacturing, pricing and much more.
Prepare to Be a Millionaire is a unique book. I would recommend it to business school students, entrepreneurs, and anyone looking to grow a business.
16 Jun, 2010
Big Fruit!
When the Banana Company arrives in Macondo, the jungle town in Gabriel García Márquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” it brings with it first modernity and then doom. “Endowed with means that had been reserved for Divine Providence in former times,” García Márquez writes, the company “changed the pattern of the rains, accelerated the cycle of harvests and moved the river from where it had always been.” It imported “dictatorial foreigners” and “hired assassins with machetes” to run the town; it unleashed a “wave of bullets” on striking workers in the plaza. When the Banana Company leaves, Macondo is “in ruins.”
If Macondo is meant to represent Latin America, it is fitting that “the Banana Company” plays so central a role in its development and decline. For much of the 20th century, the American banana company United Fruit dominated portions of almost a dozen countries in the Western Hemisphere. It was, Peter Chapman writes in “Bananas,” his breezy but insightful history of the company, “more powerful than many nation states ... a law unto itself and accustomed to regarding the republics as its private fiefdom.” United Fruit essentially invented not only “the concept and reality of the banana republic,” but also, as Chapman shows, the concept and reality of the modern banana. “If it weren’t for United Fruit,” he observes, “the banana would never have emerged from the dark, then arrived in such quantities as to bring prices that made it available to all.”