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Topic: Prentice Hall Inc.

  

You And Your Posse

Headhunter Kelvin Thompson talks about how -- and why -- to sell yourself as a team player.READ»

MANAGEMENT   |  Comment

General Ledger

Consultant Debunking UnitREAD»

Financial Aid

Mark Kantrowitz knows all the tricks when it comes to increasing your family's share of federal student aid.READ»

Reader's Choice

An extensive study offers lessons from the rogues' gallery of business.READ»

Clued In: Creating Experiences That Keep Customers Coming Back Again and Again.

Welcome! My name is Lou Carbone. I'm the founder and CEO of a company in Minneapolis called Experience Engineering and I'm also the author of Clued In: How to Keep Customers Coming Back Again and Again, published by Prentice Hall. ...READ»

It's Customers First Month At FastCompany.com

Hi and welcome to Customers First month at FastCompany.com. It seems like topic A around the watercooler these days has been how poorly we're being treated as customers lately. The irony, of course, is that companies talk more than ...READ»

World Books and Other Global Resources

Heading for Singapore or Timbuktu? Check out these four resources before you pack your bags.READ»

INNOVATION   |  Comment

Driving Innovation

Traditional car companies are courting a new group of consumers with hard-driving innovation. Learn about the unconventional branding campaigns launched by Chrysler, Toyota, and Mercedes-Benz to inject some soul in new cars created for generation Y.READ»

BRAND   |  Comment

Like Life, Branding Needs Vision Too

Do the Beatles, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and the invention of the radio have anything in common?READ»

Action Item - The Write Stuff

A short course on writing effective emails.READ»

Fast Company Library

Books previously featured in Fast Company (2000)READ»

CEOs Toe-dip Into Design

What would Herman Miller do?READ»

   |  Comment

Fast Company Library

Books previously featured in Fast CompanyREAD»

INNOVATION   |  Comment

Free to Be B2B

How do your rates compare to your competitors? This course helps marketers assign more accurate values to products and services.READ»

Do You Have the Will to Lead?

Philosopher Peter Koestenbaum poses the truly big questions: How do we act when risks seem overwhelming? What does it mean to be a successful human being?READ»

Putting Customers First

You'd think more companies would have gotten it by now. Unfortunately, organizations that put customers at the center of what they do are rare -- so rare that we're celebrating them. Meet the best customer-focused outfits, and learn from them.READ»

Good News - It's a Small World

Who cares where our cars, computers, or clothes are made? If December's "Battle of Seattle" is any indication, lots of people do. A book by two savvy journalists makes the case for globalization.READ»

MANAGEMENT   |  Comment

Consultants to Women: Show Us Your Money

How does investment advice for women differ from investment advice for men?READ»

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Richard J. Leider

Find Your Calling columnistREAD»

Free Your Job and Your Mind Will Follow

Steve Mariotti shone as a corporate cog, succeeded as a solo businessman, struggled as a high-school teacher, and found meaning in the nonprofit he started. Stepping out on your own, he says, can be more than a good move -- it can be a moral obligation.READ»

The 15 Best Product Designs

Craig Vogel and Jonathan Cagan offer their list of the top-15 best-designed consumer products of the past 100 years. What's on your list?READ»

Free Your Job and Your Mind Will Follow

Steve Mariotti shone as a corporate cog, succeeded as a solo businessman, struggled as a high-school teacher, and found meaning in the nonprofit he started. Stepping out on your own, he says, can be more than a good move -- it can be a moral obligation.READ»

The Starbucks Effect

A coffee shop appears in Dublin--and forces us to reckon with the future.READ»

Share the Wealth

The new economy is great at unleashing innovation. It's just not very fair at sharing the bounty. A new book offers an ambitious "populist vision." You may not like its answers, but you can't ignore the questions.READ»

We, Incorporated

More than neighborhoods and churches, corporations define our values. But they're not up to the task.READ»