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Price: $1.33 as of 03/11/2010 13:21 EST
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9781905940851
ISBN: 1905940858
Label: Infinite Ideas Limited
Manufacturer: Infinite Ideas Limited
Number Of Pages: 128
Publication Date: February 29, 2008
Publisher: Infinite Ideas Limited
Studio: Infinite Ideas Limited
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: Let's be honest: the financial outlook for the coming year isn't great. But your business will be OK - as long as you act now. It doesn't matter if economists' metrics indicate that technically the economy is not in recession. Whatever they say it's going to feel like one and in the words of the great Willie John McBride, you need to get your retaliation in first. Take the necessary action now and the recession everyone is talking about could actually turn out to be good news for your company; after all there's probably a lot of stuff you have been putting off sorting for ages: your pricing policy, how overdue accounts are handled, whether to drop that product range, sorting out morale levels and resolving team issues.Well now's the time to get all those issues sorted, and this is the book to help you succeed. "Beat the 2008 Recession" contains the best of current thinking on how to survive - and with care, thrive - in the impending global economic downturn. It is entirely practical and there is absolutely no padding, waffle or theory. There are no pictures, stories or case studies. Just 100 per cent turn-this-business-around-now value. Here are the 17 brilliant ideas you have to implement now to strengthen and build your company's performance. Simply brilliant.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This is another good book on the business impact of recessions. It gives a long series of good pointers and solid advice that is useful to business managers in most industries. While the author has a British bias (he is from the UK), nevertheless most of the information could be applicable to a US audience. The only ingredient missing that could have made this a great book was that it did not give the readers a clear map, a grand plan, or strategy as to what exactly to do, and how to choose among ... Read More
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