The bestselling business books of all time


Sifting through a million physical copies is a challenge in today’s publishing climate doing so with a business book is even trickier. Yet 11 authors have managed it since 2004, when Nielsen began tracking book sales. Occupying the executive suite: Tom Rath’s StrengthsFinder 2.0, from 2007, which purports to help you discover hidden talents and put them to use.
Rath’s sales demolish even those of such well-known pop-econ-psych works as Blink and Freakonomics. The oldest title still being plucked off shelves: The find-a-career classic What Color Is Your Parachute?, first published in 1970 and now in its 47th edition.
Flight BookingChieh Huang, co-founder and CEO of Boxed, shares what he reads at 30,000 feet
In a good book, I look for people who have made a tonne of mistakes, so I can learn from them. One of the observations in The Founder’s Mentality [by Chris Zook and James Allen] is that founder-led companies, in general, perform better on the stock market. Before that, I read The Hard Thing About Hard Things [by Ben Horowitz, co-founder of VC firm Andreessen Horowitz]. He went through so much. He had two weeks of cash left and IPO’d as a last resort.
First Published: Dec 01, 2016, 06:37
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