This Audiofy audiobook chip packs Eric Conger's full 2.5 hour reading of "The New York Times Pocket MBA Business Planning" on a tiny memory card. A single Audiofy audiobook chip, hardly larger than a stamp, holds a complete digital audiobook, and saves the last listening position automatically, unlike CDs. With an SD memory card slot or low-cost adapter - like those for digital cameras - this Audiofy audiobook chip can be played on Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh desktop computers or laptops (Microsoft Windows XP/2000/Me/98, or Apple Mac OS X 10.3.9 and above) or transferred to Apple iPod media players. Audiobook chips also move seamlessly to most Palm OS and Pocket PC handheld PDAs with SD expansion slots, as well as Treo and Windows Mobile "smartphones" (Palm OS 5.2 or Windows Mobile 2002 and above)... Learn the 25 keys to a great business plan that will help guide your company's expansion and attract necessary financing. Business Planning is part of The New York Times Pocket MBA Series, a reference series easily accessible to all businesspersons, from first-level managers to the executive suite. The 12-volume series is written by Ph.D.s who teach in the finest graduate business programs in the country, and edited by business editors from The New York Times. Edward E. Williams, Ph.D., James R. Thompson, Ph.D., and H. Albert Napier, Ph.D., are all professors at Rice University, and frequently published authors. Eric Conger has appeared on television's "Another World" and "Loving," and narrated over 48 audiobooks. "You couldn't ask for more in terms of content or organization." - AudioFile. "...brings important business principles as close as your headphones." - AV Guide.
This book is provides good sources of information and motivates readers and listeners to pursue their objectives with careful and strategic planning. ‘The burning desire to succeed is the success of the business to the entrepreneur and the super salesperson is the success of sales in the business, usually, the entrepreneur of the business.’ Surely, “ If an organization wants to survive it must grow. With growth, comes risk.”