Top 5 AU Management Books for June 2009

By Brian Haverty | July 1, 2009

BNET Australia Contributors

Aussie Rules

Biography

BNET Australia Contributors

BNET Australia Contributors
Phil Dobbie has a wealth of radio and business experience. In his BTalk Australia podcast, he provides a lively and insightful view on business issues.
Brian Haverty is editorial director for CBS Interactive Australia and is responsible for the company's BNET and ZDNet Australia sites.
Robert Gerrish is a coach, author and professional speaker and the founder of Flying Solo, an Australian online community for solo business owners.
Melissa Lourenco is the HR manager for CBS Interactive in Australia.
Chris Golis is the author of The Humm Handbook: Lifting Your Level of Emotional Intelligence. He runs seminars and workshops on EQ.
Suzi Dafnis is Community Director of the Australian Businesswomen's Network.
Yvonne Adele helps organisations build a culture of ideas by teaching people at all levels to access their untapped creative thinking skills.

According to sales data from Dymocks Australia, the cheese has moved again — right to the top of the June charts. And I think the cheese has set off a definite aroma of self-improvement in this month’s top books.

Here are the Top 5 selling books for June, 2009:

  1. Who Moved My Cheese?
    By Spencer Johnson
    For a book that was first published over a decade ago (in 1998), all we can really say about this top-seller is that is seems to aging nicely.
  2. Good to Great
    By Jim Collins
    Following up on Collins’ last book, Built to Last, this bestseller puts forth the concept that traditional business thinking may not always be the answer.
  3. Think Big and Kick Ass
    By Donald Trump and Bill Zanker
    Documenting a journey from being involved in one of the biggest real estate bankruptcies in history right back to the top, and co-authored by the CEO of the Learning Annex, this book talks about the benefits of stepping up to challenges. Personally, I find it difficult to understand, though, how publishers could have missed titling this book: “You’re Fired (Up)”.
  4. 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
    By Stephen R Covey
    According to the blurb, this book “presents a holistic, integrated, principle-centred approach for solving personal and professional problems”. Put more simply (and with fewer “p”s), Covey uses anecdotes to illustrate effective methods of adapting to change.
  5. Fish!
    By Stephen C. Lundin, Harry Paul, John Christensen
    Last month, this was the only book not based on coping with the recession. In June, it rounds out a Top 5 that seems more concerned with how to do things better.

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