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Awakening the Entrepreneur Within: How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary Companies
 
 

Awakening the Entrepreneur Within: How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary Companies (Hardcover)

~ (Author)
Key Phrases: dreaming room, surrogate practitioner, awakening the entrepreneur within, John Blackwell, Manny Espinosa, Business Model (more...)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Awakening the Entrepreneur Within: How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary Companies + The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It + E-Myth Mastery: The Seven Essential Disciplines for Building a World Class Company
Price For All Three: $41.59

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"E-MYTH training is a powerful tool and a core component of Allstate’s agency growth strategy. E-Myth teaches Allstate consultants and agency owners how to grow as entrepreneurs while improving their quality of life in the process."

-- Gary Briggs, field vice president, Allstate Insurance Company

"For those who are stuck in a rut or looking to dig deep, this title makes for a solid, albeit esoteric, guidebook." -- SRQ: Sarasota's Premiere Magazine

"No business author has touched me as deeply as Michael Gerber has." -- Jack Canfield, co-creator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul bestselling series

"The dean of small business gurus tells readers how to use the four dimensions of the entrepreneurial personality--dreamer, thinker, performer and leader--to inspire the vision and purpose to craft their own business narratives." -- Entrepreneur



Review

"E-MYTH training is a powerful tool and a core component of Allstate's agency growth strategy. E-Myth teaches Allstate consultants and agency owners how to grow as entrepreneurs while improving their quality of life in the process." (Gary Briggs, field vice president, Allstate Insurance Company )

"For those who are stuck in a rut or looking to dig deep, this title makes for a solid, albeit esoteric, guidebook." (SRQ: Sarasota's Premiere Magazine )

"The dean of small business gurus tells readers how to use the four dimensions of the entrepreneurial personality--dreamer, thinker, performer and leader--to inspire the vision and purpose to craft their own business narratives." (Entrepreneur )

"No business author has touched me as deeply as Michael Gerber has." (Jack Canfield, co-creator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul bestselling series )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: HarperBusiness (March 4, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061568147
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061568145
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #112,615 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Michael E. Gerber
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26 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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105 of 116 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Goofy Guru, April 10, 2008
By Dr. Toad (Stanford, CA) - See all my reviews
Most "How to" business books are forgettable. You buy them at the airport, try to read them during the flight, get bored and annoyed, and leave them when the plane has landed in the seat pocket in front of you, together with the in-flight magazine and the puke bag.

This unfortunate new how-to business book by Michael Gerber is especially vain and self-important, repetitive and shallow, hokey and badly written, and without a shred of humor or irony to temper the often messiah-like pronouncement. But it is also revealing.

Vain and self-important: The book begins with 13 ½ pages of praise for the genius of Michael Gerber, mostly by other gurus, and in large part for an earlier book, "E-Myth Revisited." Chapter headings are embellished with eclectic quotes from famous people, who would presumably cringe at the thought of being recruited for this commercial enterprise: You'll find John Lennon and Richard Wagner, e.e. cummings and Ernest Hemmingway, Paul Klee and even James Joyce. Speaking of putting perfume on a pig! On page 4 in the weird opening chapter allegedly reporting a conversation between the 69 year old Michael and his Mom, who's in her nineties, Mom has this to add to the first 13 ½ pages of fake testimony: "You are a remarkable man, Michael ...; even if I weren't your mother, you are a remarkable man." As Michael confesses to feeling foolish and afraid and without a purpose, she calms him down the way a mother will console even the runt of her litter: "You are one of the most imaginative people I know." And then: "I feel your pain. I do."

Repetitive and shallow: Up to page 126, the book is nothing but a historical rehash of the method guiding Gerber's company E-Myth Worldwide. It retells the shopworn story of how he, already forty years old, turned his life of a so-so salesman (among other trials-and-errors) into a career of a ... successful salesman. He had found the ideal product to sell: Himself. And that's what he retells on the next one-hundred pages: About the 10 Pillars of a successful small business, the 7 Centers of Management Attention, and the mantra that the "system is the solution." In fairness it must be said that decades ago, with the book "E-Myth - Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It" and its updated sequel "E-Myth Revisited," Gerber had a well-deserved bestseller. Starting from the observation that most companies are started by specialists, whom Gerber calls technicians, he diagnosed that the high failure rate of about 80% was due to the fact that technicians only work "within the business, not on the business." Their drive to start a business is nothing but an "entrepreneurial seizure." The remedy, according to Gerber, is to "systematize" the business, to create turnkey processes that are as repeatable as the routines in franchises such as McDonald's. There is something to this. The "entrepreneurial seizure" phrase is eminently marketable, and doesn't it sound right? Yes, superficially. But, while being a specialist does not guarantee business success, most companies start with people who know their domain, have specific skills, broad expertise and deep knowledge. And surveys have shown that it is lack of planning, lack of management skills, and lack of sufficient start-up financing, among other things, that trip up small businesses. No scientific (or otherwise) survey has ever pinpointed Gerber's diagnosis as a root cause for business failure. And, after all, in the 30 years of Gerber's E-Myth methodology, the failure rate for small businesses has not measurably dropped.

Hokey and badly written: What's the "Dreaming Room" where the "Awakening" takes place? Listen to this paradox dressed as wisdom: The book promotes "Dreaming Rooms" where Gerber as the guru wants to "inspire people to dream by awakening the entrepreneur." So what's a great dream? "A great Dream (capital D) is a great idea for a business that blows people's minds." Well, o.k., that is very confused blustery language, but tell me more. The "more" finally appears on page 130. And the "more" will cost you $5,000. That's what a ticket to the Dreaming Room costs. Now the cat's out. What do you get for five big ones? (1) You get 2 ½ "intense, creative days" with the "Chief Dreamer, Michael E. Gerber." (2) You get unspecified help forming your own Dreaming Room. (3) You get unspecified help from the global network of fellow dreamers. (4) You can re-enter the Gerber Dreaming Room, but only if you bring a new dream-candidate carrying $5,000. So that's it: He's selling himself again. "Call us. Enroll today. Come dream with me."

Humor: Towards the end, Gerber turns it up. What he offers is a "sacred moment." He poses a rhetorical question: "Is this spiritual work? Yes and no ..." He philosophizes: "We are what we think ... `I am', said the one. I am, I say to you ..." This is all a funny (or ridiculous) mix of "The Secret" and Deepak Chopra.

Revealing: The McDonald's success of selling billions of burgers, all interchangeably bad for you, in thousands of franchises staffed with minimal pay novice workers, is in fact the source of the idea Gerber implemented in his own business consulting company E-Myth. Modeled after the burger giant, he has created a turnkey consulting system "so we could hire novices, turn them into experts, and deliver our services ... at no more than the cost of a minimal wage employee." (Page 65). And that is indeed what E-Myth does. Inexperienced people, paid around $40,000 a year, memorize the system (10 Pillars, 7 Centers, etc.), and, for a few thousand dollars, repeat it back to you - on the phone! They won't see your company, they are not hands-on, they don't know you or anybody, anything about your company. The Dreaming Room is just another trap for the same "system," now embroidered with spiritual mush and the promise that closing your eyes will make you see the truth. Beware, small business man and woman. In times of danger - and small businesses are often in danger, like fast moving cars - it is better to keep your eyes wide open and your minds sharp. (Disclaimer: I am a business consultant working with start-ups and mid-size businesses in Silicon Valley and San Francisco. I have seen Gerber in action. He is a terrific salesman. But he is not a saint and not a genius. He wants your money. That comes with the territory.)
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27 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars E-mystefied, April 1, 2008
By Tony Fanfulla (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
After reading everything that there is by Michael Gerber and being somewhat in awe of the simple yet amazing results that have been achieved through his organisation and his books I was somewhat mystefied by this book.

While it contains a few secret gems I saw it as extremel self indulgent and in many parts irrelevant to the reader. The use of Sarah at All about Pies in the orginal E-myth revisited clearly put the reader in a position of really knowing the feelings of a business owner. The use of Manny Espisota was perplexing!

This and the blatant blowing of a personal trumpert and direct selling of his services half way through and comletely out of context has left me disappointed.

Sometimes you just have to know when the time is right to get out on top...unfortunately Mr Gerber did not!
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27 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Man in Search of Personal Meaning...Even as He Gives Meaning to Business, March 9, 2008
It isn't easy writing a review of someone who long ago wrote one of the seminal business books, one that schooled millions on taking a systematic approach to building a small to medium size business. I respect Gerber immensely for his contribution to business thought leadership. As a result, I wanted to like this book especially after being somewhat bored by some of his more recent books that seemed to just be twisting the E-Myth routine.

This book really engaged me. Gerber's focus on the role of vision and passionate purpose in business success matched my own observations over 25+ years of consulting to companies of all size. The best systems in the world will not make a "me-to" business a raging success. On the other hand, vision without implementation and process building also makes for a flawed business.

I especially liked Gerber's treatment of the four dimensions of the Entrepreneurial Personality. I really related to his construct that success requires one to be skilled in, or acquire talent in, dreaming, thinking, storytelling, and leading. Every day, I become more aware of the power of storytelling, both as to the stories we tell ourselves (see Debbie Ford, Joe Caruso et al) and the stories we tell employees and customers. I was delighted to see Gerber's elevation of this skill to top ranking.

Covering a model of business success in a single book is no easy task. I would give this book a five star for readers looking for a sound introduction to small business success in a single book. For avid readers of Gerber's earlier books, I believe you will find some fresh thinking that warrants a four star rating. Any avid readers looking for Gerber to abandon his past thesis and offer up something 100% new will undoubtedly be disappointed.

I expect that many serious students of the art of writing will be somewhat put-off by the first and last chapters which, for me, felt out of synch with the rest of the book. If you believe that good books must, at minimum, start strong and end strong, these two chapters took away from my appreciation of the book as a serious business guide. Hence, my four star rating.

Astute readers and philosophers will detect, in the aforementioned first and last chapters, a man who has made important contributions to the business world nevertheless seemingly still in search for real meaning in his own life. If that is actually the case, kudos to Gerber for having the guts to share that with us. But, how sad that at this stage of his life (70) he is still searching for meaning. Here is hoping that the author soon finds his life purpose and the peace that goes with such discovery, and that his next book is a departure from the E-Myth line and instead shares his insights on "man's search for meaning."

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Like listening to a neighbor ramble on about his business when I'm running late
I listened to this as a CD, read by the author, while at work. I must confess, I stopped about three quarters of the way through the CD set. Read more
Published 17 days ago by Teri LaFlesh

1.0 out of 5 stars Appalling
Briefly put, I got the audiobook at the library and was appalled when Mr. Gerber had the audacity to plug-in his consulting services. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Tomas A. Maly

4.0 out of 5 stars Yet another home run; I credit a lot the success I've had to Mr. Gerber
I read his first book in 1999 by 2006 my company was the 1308'th fastest growing company in the US (you can look it up). AND I had a better quality of life. Read more
Published 5 months ago by C. Denny

1.0 out of 5 stars If You Must Read This, Get A Copy From Your Local Library
I can't believe how much money I wasted on this dreck! I bought the unabridged audio book. It was bad enough, that I stopped listening to it after 2 CDs, and listened to another... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Paul Martin

1.0 out of 5 stars Another Marketing Scam
I bought this book because of the E-Myth. But this book is basically a promotion of Michael Gerber's new Project "The Dreaming Room" among many has gems like this: "Only $5,000... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Carlos Velasquez Ortega

3.0 out of 5 stars Awakening the Entrepreneur Within: review by Jon Gillespie-Brown, Author "So you want to be an entrepreneur"
Being a fan of Tony Robbins books when I saw this is I immediately thought of "Awaken the giant within" written 20 years ago and this was a positive motivation to try this book. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Jon Gillespie-Brown

1.0 out of 5 stars A WASTE OF TIME
Awakening the Entrepreneur Within: How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary CompaniesGERBER SAID IT ALL WITH THE E-MYTH AND THE E-MYTH REVISITED. Read more
Published 11 months ago by BUSINESS GURU

1.0 out of 5 stars Totally disappointing
It starts nicely, catches your attention and then, when it comes to the point, it turns out to be just a marketing tool for the author's new business "the dreaming room". Read more
Published 11 months ago by Jay Kay

4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyed, but not my favorite
I really like Michael Gerber the teacher. I appreciate everything he has written and appreciate his business mind. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Whit

2.0 out of 5 stars Book was wierd, boring, and had very little meat.
The book seemed geared toward small businesses in the service sector, with no help for those who produce a physical product. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Eric R. Martin

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