Books/Resources on Entrepreneurship

Hey Any Forums. I'm trying to get my foot wet into the world of entrepreneurship. I've always had an interest in it but have always struggled with motivation. I am currently going to college for business administration with the intention on becoming a marketing manager, but have also toyed with the idea of running my own business. What books or other resources would you recommend?

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Other urls found in this thread:

navalmanack.com/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Clive
paulgraham.com/articles.html
ycombinator.com/library
twitter.com/AnonBabble

this is the only one you need
also free navalmanack.com/

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Hill was a con artist. There's some pretty good articles on him and his life out there. Honestly you'll do better in life if you study how he hustled everyone rather than reading his bait.

Throw me an article please :)

What this user said, don't even bother with Napoleon "conman" Hill.
Read and watch Alex Hormozi on YT, he has a lot of free business knowledge. His book is called "$100 million offers".

Other books:
Expert secrets, dotcom secrets and traffic secrets all by Russell Brunson
Ready, Aim, Fire by Michael Masterson
Influence by Robert Cialdini
The one thing by Gary Keller
The ultimate sales letter, the ultimate marketing plan both by Dan Kennedy
The Boron letters by Gary Halbert
Confessions of an advertising man by David Ogilvy
I have more but these are sufficient. Also, "marketers Utopia" is a great place to start.

Thank you for this list! I plan to read as much as I can.

yw

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Not necessarily looking to get into trading just yet, but thank you regardless

Blue Ocean Strategy - W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne

Those are all shit, the only book that would be worth a dime would be a step by step description of how to concretely start a successful business, but those don't exists because it's different for every businesses and people who have done it are doers not book writers.

Hu actually that would be a great business idea, to write a book about starting a business but a non-shitty book

Rich dad poor dad is actually pretty great as it gives you the right basic principles, just don't take his advices on non-specific stuffs since it only worked for the generation of the author

I have to start somewhere, and as long as I'm not taking everything as gospel then I think I'll be fine.

Noted, thank you very much for your input

Is small giants by bo burlingham any good?

Robert Clive

>One of 13 children
>Father had temper
>Scared off gang protection racket as a child by perching on the rooftop and immitating a gargoyle
>Attempted suicide twice in teens due to depression and failed
>Failed accountant
>By 19 through shear balls, wins the battle of Plassey in Bangladesh and makes East India Trading company (corporation) the ruler of much of East / South India
>At 19, due to victory at Plassey and putting some Pajeet warlord as a puppet, was given a tax reward of $4.3M USD per year ( £30,000 (equivalent to £4,300,000 in 2021) in perpetuity
>Kicked all the French out of India, and kicked all the Pajeet warlords to the curb. He essentially thorugh a private company, ruled all of India / Afghanistan
>Looted India and Persia like a nigger in a Rolex store his entire life
>Given deeds and titles through UK

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Clive

Elon Musk, Gates and Bezos are pikers by comparison.

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all of these books are trash fyi. TA is a meme for retail. banks don't trade using retail TA

>Scared off gang protection racket as a child by perching on the rooftop and immitating a gargoyle
that's not what the article says at all you fucking nigger
>When he was older he and a gang of teenagers established a protection racket that vandalised the shops of uncooperative merchants in Market Drayton. Clive also exhibited fearlessness at an early age. He is reputed to have climbed the tower of St Mary's Parish Church in Market Drayton and perched on a gargoyle, frightening those down below.[21]

He was PART of the gang and he climbed a tower and perched to SCARE NORMIES.

if you're talking about startups, the most important things are just
- make a product people actually will use
- be careful who you work with (i.e. co-founders etc)
there's lots of other smaller, probably obvious things like be careful of feature creep, don't spend money on useless stuff, be prepared to pivot if needed, be helpful for your customers, pay your employees fairly, don't get caught up in the startup buzz just work on your product, you don't need a disruptive idea really but try to avoid saturated markets, all that stuff. If it's anything to do with software then learn some programming too

i liked paul grahams essays, they can be motivational
paulgraham.com/articles.html
and there's some more stuff here
ycombinator.com/library

Out of these infographs, which books are worth it for learning more on entrepreneurship?

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this is a stunner, not on your infographic

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