By Natalie Robehmed | Dec 1, 2016
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.
Klieg LitCelebrities are big business in the book industry, routinely securing boffo advances for their memoirs. Now there’s also a cottage industry of celeb publishers eager to cash in on the back end, too. Some imprints have been small, such as actor Viggo Mortensen’s Perceval Press, which focuses on the arts and criticism. Others are more mainstream. One certain to do well: Oprah Winfrey’s as-yet-unnamed Flatiron Books imprint, which will publish her memoir in 2017.
Images: Shutterstock.comFlight BookingChieh Huang, co-founder and CEO of Boxed, shares what he reads at 30,000 feet
Image: Patrick James MilletIn 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.