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13 Reviews
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Misleading Title...For the Real Deal, Look Elsewhere!,
By biz_buzz "biz_buzz" (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
What a misleading title! This book should have been entitled 'Chicken Soup for the Worker.' It is that genre of books that this one should be compared to, not any book that REALLY provides genuine advice to "take initiative at work" (see some "real deal" suggestions below).As others have already pointed out, this book consists of anecdotes about people making a difference at work...and that's really it. Some shreds of 'advice' are included, almost seemingly as an afterthought. Save yourself some money and read these kinds of cutesy anecdotes in any number of magazines. A review of 2 or 3 stars may be defendable but the misleading title annoys me to the point where I took stars away because of it. Not impressed. For the real deal; for books that REALLY advise you on "Ways to Take Initiative at Work" as well as your career, check out Tom Peters' "The Brand You 50" and Jeffrey Fox's "How to Become CEO." Good luck!
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
By Pelke (Austin, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
This book should be renamed "1001 Stories About People Who Took Initiative at Work". There was very little actual advice to guide the reader on how to take initiative at work. Almost the entire book was composed of short anecdotes about others who did something special on the job. I found these stories to be somewhat interesting for the first 50 pages or so, but tired of them quickly. If you're looking for inspiration on how to increase your performance at work, I'd recommend looking elsewhere.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
More initative after taking initiatives,
By Doris Liang (Hong Kong) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
This book is useful in "initiating" the reader to build up his/her initiatives. I have made use of some of the suggested ways and cases to review my career again, and doing my mid-year apprasial! The book will be more easy to read if less examples are listed and more emphasis put on the suggestions.
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
20 Ways and 981 Anecdotes,
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
Author Nelson went to the Internet for a big portion of this book, and I've found that quotes people from the web ("A truly great worker does such and such" --netblabbymom) undermine the credibility of a business how-to book. I want EXPERT advice and ideas, not pithy sayings from the slacker in the cubicle down the hall.Some of the stories *are* inspiring, but they aren't organized in such a manner that a reader can quickly assess what they address. I don't want to read through 15 anecdotes of how line workers in Wisconsin performed acts normally assigned to management to get the bolts to Michigan overnight-- not when I'm trying to figure out how to break the "we don't do it that way" cycle in my nonprofit association. If you're pressed for time, leave this one on the shelf. ******As a side note-- "Top 10" reviewer Robert Morris gave this a five-star rating. I noticed that only one out of his last 40 reviews received under five stars-- it got four.********
13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Spread The Message,
By George Tutt (Tennessee) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
I am constantly on the lookout for ways to keep my employees (frontline personnel) focused on bringing value to the corporation and to their jobs. I like the fact that this book presents the ideas and concepts of initiative and then gives concrete examples of them put into practice. I have purchased 50 of these books to share with the 50 frontline personnel that I have responsibility for - this includes line workers and entry level supervisors. I am confident it will help keep us on the road to improvement and higher profits.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good but not the Guidebook the Title Suggests...,
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
This book consists primarily of anecdote-length stories of people making a real difference in their work, including a couple of oft-told tales (you'd have to be living under a rock to not have heard of the 3M Post-It Notes story). That's all fine and good, but it is not quite what I was expecting. The title suggests the book is more of a workbook of HOW to take initiative at work as opposed to primarily being a collection of stories of people who already did it. True, there is a gray "tool box" advice section on a portion of some pages (the book is laid out more like a magazine than a typical book), but the advice was hardly an action plan to take initiative at work. A "good" book but hardly a "great" one.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I like the self-development side of it !,
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
It was 1999, when I purchased this book... It has been waiting on my bookself patiently to be read since then - I mean till recently. Although I had look at it couple of times before, I had almost the same negative impression with the some other reviewers here. I thought it sounds dull and ordinary.
However, my mind changed last weekend. As a person who temporarily depressed about his career expectations, I took the book from the shelf (you can't imagine the amount of dust it has!! just joking..) and I started to read "Part3: Your Career and Your Life" section of the book. I felt incredible good as there are lots of useful advise I can benefit, there are many people's sincere stories which I can appreciate and respect. Maybe it is not a perfect book and obviously not written for All time tigers (who want to win-win and win, create hard to believe success stories, then become CEO - till the next lay off and start the game again if any time and energy left!) but it can be a loyal friend of the its owner during all over his/her career. I think it is worth to buy and listen what Bob says...
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not at all what I was looking for,
By
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
While "1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work" was an interesting read at first but I eventually put it down for several weeks before forcing myself to continute.
While some stories can give at least a hint of an idea if not an actual suggestion on how to step up on the job, 98% of this book seems redundant and lacking. If you're looking for, as on reviewer said, "Chicken Soup for the Employee's Soul" you've found it. If you are looking for something to guide you into being a better employee and coworker, move on.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
20 great pages, 200 pages of filler,
By A Customer
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
As others have pointed out, this book would have been great if it was called something along the lines of "101 ways to take initiative at work". Lots of useless "examples". I use the word examples lightly, because they are really stretching what they consider initiative. For example, there is a chapter called "Learning and Education". There is a story in there about someone who felt he was due a promotion but didn't get it because he lacked an MBA. So what did he do? He quit and found a different job. I'm not sure how that is showing initiative at work. Perhaps it can be considered showing initiative in his personal career, but initiative at work would have been him either getting the MBA part time or convincing his management that he didn't need it. All this showed me was that if there is an obstable at work, my "initiative" should be to quit and find a different job. Hardly motivating. There are many other anecdotes along these lines. There are a few good ones, but it isn't worth reading through the 900 bad ones to discover them.What this book does really nicely though is make it easy for you to read the good stuff without reading the warm and fuzzy stories. Seperated from the main text in the borders and at the bottom pages are grey boxes with some good information. I have photocopied a couple to hang up in my cube. There are some great ideas and suggestions in these. But not all the grey box stuff is good. There are alot of quotes that came from an Internet based poll about initiative, such as "If your employer sees your initiative, then all else will fall into place". This quote is attributed to "Maria, from the Internet". Well, thanks, Maria, but if I wanted to read quotes from people who like to post little nuggets of wisdom online, I could save $10 and search through the many job sites out there. Obviously, I know that initiative is a good thing, or else I would have never picked up this book. I don't need to read the wisdom of semi-anonymous people telling me why I need to show initiative. Give me examples HOW. Finally, this book was written in 1999. It reflects the Dot Com era of the day. Many examples are how to improve my working condition, and how this person did such a great job showing initiative and bringing a day care center to work. Well, with all due respect, my career is not going to advance in 2003 by pushing an initiative that is going to cost my company money. It may gain me the respect of my co-workers, but I've already got that. I need to know how to impress my management. That's why I read this book. All in all, the stuff that was good in this book was REALLY GOOD. I would have given it 5 stars if it wasn't surrounded by other [stuff]. Take it out from your local library, but save your cash.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Quotes To Live By.,
By Andy Teach "Author, FROM GRADUATION TO CORPOR... (Los Angeles, CA.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work (Paperback)
I bought this book a while ago with the intent of sitting down with my employees and reading some of the quotes in this book to them with the hope of inspiring them to initiate more. I never actually got around to doing that but I do think this book contains some good quotes that can be passed on to your employees. Some of my favorites are:
"Every company is looking for the person who will go the extra mile." "Intelligence without initiative is a smart person who doesn't want to work." "Its not the boss's job to ask what you're working on and how its going. It's up to you to seek out the boss." "Complete tasks in a timely fashion. Don't rely on others to remind you of your commitments." "Initiative makes the difference between 'robots at work' and 'people at work.'" Granted, this book is filled with brief examples of initiation and many miscellaneous quotes from people in the workforce. Many of these quotes came from people on the internet but the bottom line is that they are common sense and if the average employee followed the advice given in the book, the jobs of their supervisorsFROM GRADUATION TO CORPORATION: THE PRACTICAL GUIDE TO CLIMBING THE CORPORATE LADDER ONE RUNG AT A TIME would be a lot easier. |
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1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work by Bob Nelson (Paperback - October 1, 1999)
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