Many business books are being sold and advertised out in the market for your use, but not all of them discuss business in more finance-related terms. Many have been written for use of amateur and small-scale enterprises and serve as simple guidelines and case history accounts. If you are looking for books that will be useful tools for more large-scale business ventures and corporations, a different shelf is intended for you.
Focusing more on finance means delving into investments, banking, money management and assets management in a larger scale. This is more of a corporate term than a simple home-based enterprise concept, and using this for a large scale corporation would entail knowing a different set of information. Think that the huge bulk of business books dwell on the home business types of ventures alone? Think again. Finance, is, after all, a science and it has to be taken in a more serious manner if it is to be used in more serious business matters. If you look hard enough, more of the technical and theoretical ones are out there waiting to be read. Here is a list of books you may want to consider for your reference:
The Little Book that Builds Wealth by Pat Dorsey – This book deals with knowing where to invest and how to decipher good strategies in protecting your business through the concept of economic moats and differentiating truly effective moats from those that are not.
Secrets of the Millionaire Mind by T. Harv Eker – Do you feel ignorant when it comes to handling money? This book deals about money management and effective money accumulation through understanding it theoretically. Money is not just cheques, bills and coins. Handling it more effectively will eliminate risks of financial difficulties. If you want to learn how to do so, this book can serve as the right tool for you.
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits (Creating People-Profit Opportunities in Your Organization) by Rita Bailey and Scott Cawood – This book is all about having the heart for business and using your drive in order to achieve success and big numbers in profit. This book provides interview accounts from successful business executives you can learn from.
The (Mis)Behavior of Markets (A Fractal View of Risk, Ruin and Reward) by Richard Hudson and Benoit Mandelbrot – Markets are undeniably unstable and unpredictable, and this book dwells on this subject. Handling business becomes difficult with this turbulence, and thus this book has been written to provide a mathematical approach to the problem with the use of fractal finance.
Make business books mean more than just the regular guide to maintaining a small business. Consult these guides to effectively manage what might be the next big corporation in the making.