OR
Your Memberships & Subscriptions
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It Kindle Edition
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
$0.00
| Free with your Audible trial | |
|
Audio CD, CD, Unabridged
"Please retry" | $19.02 | $2.23 |
- Kindle
$0.00 Read with Kindle Unlimited to also enjoy access to over 4 million more titles $18.99 to buy -
Audiobook
$0.00 Free with your Audible trial - Hardcover
from $24.001 New from $24.00 - Paperback
$9.99317 Used from $1.44 43 New from $9.67 3 Collectible from $6.93 - Audio CD
$21.7824 Used from $2.23 8 New from $19.02
An instant classic, this revised and updated edition of the phenomenal bestseller dispels the myths about starting your own business. Small business consultant and author Michael E. Gerber, with sharp insight gained from years of experience, points out how common assumptions, expectations, and even technical expertise can get in the way of running a successful business.
Gerber walks you through the steps in the life of a business—from entrepreneurial infancy through adolescent growing pains to the mature entrepreneurial perspective: the guiding light of all businesses that succeed—and shows how to apply the lessons of franchising to any business, whether or not it is a franchise. Most importantly, Gerber draws the vital, often overlooked distinction between working on your business and working in your business.
The E-Myth Revisited will help you grow your business in a productive, assured way.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperCollins e-books
- Publication dateMarch 17, 2009
- File size1628 KB
-
Next 3 for you in this series
$34.55 -
All 5 for you in this series
$56.93
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on April 1, 2021
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It inspired me to build Fivecat Studio as a Franchise Prototype, even though we knew selling our business systems as a franchise was never a planned goal. The systems we created for the firm have allowed us to thrive and have given us the freedom we need to balance the requirements of our firm with the responsibilities of our family. It is the book that inspired me to begin to work “on my business, rather than in my business.”
This book, written by Michael E. Gerber, had a major influence in the success of our firm and continues to guide many of our business decisions to this day. Fivecat Studio has been in business for 15 years. Annmarie and I experienced the startup pains of “infancy”, the hard earned success of “adolescence” and recently, with our return to the home studio and the launch of our new virtual business model, we are surprisingly “getting small again”.
As I re-read the words of this inspirational how-to guide for successful small business, it is shocking to me how accurate Mr. Gerber is as he describes the different stages of the typical small business. As I read it, I can follow the path of Fivecat Studio through good decisions and bad, through ups and downs and I can see the next steps we need to take.
I’ve read The E-Myth so many times that I have lost count. A quick peek at my Amazon order history documents that I have given this book to no fewer than 10 friends and acquaintances as a gift from one business owner to another, struggling to find a life of fulfillment and freedom.
Michael Gerber breaks his book into three sections.
In Part I, The E-Myth and the American Small Business, he defines the E-Myth as the Entrepreneurial Myth and discusses how most small businesses are the result of an Entrepreneurial Seizure. He says,
“The technician suffering from an Entrepreneurial Seizure takes the work he loves to do and turns it into a job.”
Does that sound familiar? How many architects do you know who have launched their own firms, with dreams of “doing it better” than their former employer and found themselves way over their heads in all the responsibilities of running a small business?
Gerber describes the three phases of business; Infancy, Adolescence and Maturity. He explains why it is so important to build a Mature company from the start.
“A Mature company is founded on a broader perspective, an entrepreneurial perspective, a more intelligent point of view. About building a business that works not because of you but without you. And because it starts that way, it is more likely to continue that way. And therein the true difference between an Adolescent company, where everything is left up to chance, and a Mature company, where there is a vision against which the present is shaped.”
“Successful companies don’t end up as Mature companies. They start that way.”
In Part II, The Turn-Key Revolution: A New View of Business, Mr. Gerber introduces the concept of the Franchise Prototype and the concept of “working on your business, not in it.”
He encourages us to create systems which allow for predictable results and happy clients.
“The system runs the business. The people run the system. The system integrates all the elements required to make a business work. It transforms a business into an organism, driven by integrity of its parts, all working in concert toward a realized objective. And, with its Prototype as its progenitor, it works like nothing else before it.”
Many architects I know, including Annmarie at first, reject the thought of building systems for their firms. They feel that the routines and consistency of such will limit their creativity, that they will lose their flexibility to create amazing works of architecture. When, in fact, systems will do just the opposite. When everything else required to run a successful business is set to run on “autopilot”, an architect will actually have more time and flexibility to be an architect.
Gerber continues,
“Great businesses are not built by extraordinary people, but by ordinary people doing extraordinary things. But for ordinary people to do extraordinary things, a system – ‘a way of doing things’ – is absolutely essential in order to compensate for the disparity between the skills your people have and the skills your business needs if it is to produce consistent results.”
This is also the section where some readers become frustrated with Gerber’s example of McDonald’s as a model for small business success. I know, as an architect, it is difficult to see the connection between the home of the Big Mac and our aspiring high-end residential design firms. Please trust me and read the book to the end. You will not regret learning the lessons he teaches using the examples of this successful business franchise.
Here is some of what Gerber says about McDonald’s;
“It delivers exactly what we have come to expect of it every single time. So that’s why I look upon McDonalds as a model for every small business. Because it can do in its more than 14,000 stores what most of can’t do in one! And to me, that’s what integrity is all about. It’s about doing what you say you will do, and, if you can’t, learning how. If that’s the measure of an incredible business – and I believe it is – then there is no more incredible business than McDonalds. Who among us small business owners can say we do things as well?”
Part III, Building a Small Business That Works is a step by step, how-to guide for a successful small business. He leads us through a fully developed Business Development Program and describes the many strategies required for small business success.
The E-Myth Revisited is not only your answer to building a successful small business, it’s also very entertaining. Gerber structures the information around a narrative about a woman named Sarah struggling with her small business named All About Pies. Many readers will see ourselves in Sarah as she evolves from frustrated Technician into a successful small business owner.
When I posted recently that The E-Myth was my favorite business book of all time, many from the Entrepreneur Architect Community reached out and asked me why.
In short… If you take action to implement the lessons Michael Gerber teaches, The E-Myth Revisited will take your firm to places you only imagined. I know it will work for you, because it has already worked for me.
Much of the book is spent discussing the need for systems which is 100% correct and something many, in particular more creative people, need to take to heart. I know because I’m one of them. While he is a little too in love with the franchise model the points he makes are spot-on whether you are in retail, professional services, manufacturing or anything else.
A caveat. This has been out twenty plus years so the writing style is a bit old school. Throughout the book we listen in as he mentors a small business owner. The author lays it on pretty thick as was the style of the time so you just have to roll your eyes sometimes and forge on.
I’ve been in business 40 years and have owned my own company for 20 - I learned a lot from this book. I truly wish I read it when I was starting out. Hands down this is the best book I’ve ever read on small business or starting a company. It is a must read.
Top reviews from other countries
This has been a life changing book for me.
It first taught me that I don't want to own a job, I want to own a business. Since that moment, I've learned to work on my businesses, not just in them.
This book provides the material to help change the mindset of any technician (be they in IT, bakery, floristry on any business!) and offers practical advice on how to systemsise your business.
I can't recommend this book enough for anyone who runs a business.
This book is for people who own and run a small business (or want to create one). This book is for people who have spent long, long hours building a business only to find that it is not all flowers and light, but is, in fact, all-consuming hard work. This book shows a way out of that hole - how to reshape your business so that it can run without you there, not permanently, but, you know, for weekends and holidays and the other stuff you lost along the way. It also shows you how to create a business that you could sell in the future if you wanted to - rather than a business that grinds to a halt the moment you are not there to do the work.
I'm currently reading this book fo the third-time, and it is more relevant now than ever, as I am much further along the small-business owner journey.
This is a great book, but only for those who truly understand what it is like to be Sarah...
The second section was completely turning the self-employed business to franchise model which I can call it as so…so for me as I was expecting more illustration apart from restaurant franchise.
Giving it 4 stars just because the name of the book is quite appealing but the recipe in the book is not that spicy.
It is a must buy if you are or want to be in franchise business model.
If you find the review useful, consider clicking helpful!
Reviewed in India on July 11, 2019
The second section was completely turning the self-employed business to franchise model which I can call it as so…so for me as I was expecting more illustration apart from restaurant franchise.
Giving it 4 stars just because the name of the book is quite appealing but the recipe in the book is not that spicy.
It is a must buy if you are or want to be in franchise business model.
If you find the review useful, consider clicking helpful!
The author argues that there are 3 roles in any startup business.
Entrepreneur = visionary
Manager = order, consistency
Technician = doer
The author says most small businesses fail because it is started by technicians who do not entrepreneurial and managerial skills. He advises the technical business owners to think their business as franchisee model i.e. something scalable and think how they can scale their business in this fashion. This would force their thought process to shift their mind away from THEM (as doer) to developing a SYSTEM (establishing a process with help of others).










