Back Road Lessons for Entrepreneurs, Executives and Small Business Owners
"While playing hooky from a conference in Boston a few years back, three former colleagues from Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management hopped in a car and headed on a road trip. They pulled into a shoe store in Maine and noticed that the sales help was unusually pushy. After a few questions, they discovered the store had a "secret shopper" program, in which employees would be marked down if they were not sufficiently aggressive with customers. A light bulb went off. Instead of teaching the tried-and-true case studies involving GE and Microsoft, these three wise men decided to pull their heads out of their ivory towers and go in search of insights about product differentiation, pricing, brand management, building a team, and a host of other topics"--Provided by publisher.
Reviews with the most likes.
The one chapter I read was enjoyable and educational. I'm certain its practical approach to business and supplemental travel adventure will have general appeal.
Nevertheless, I decided that reading a less intense version of a summary of a professional course (MBA) will probably skip a lot that a 30 day MBA book will cover.
Even though it's quite highly rated on Goodreads, the Roadside MBA was the only MBA book not checked out at the library.
I'm going to wait for the next one.