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Scrappy

A Little Book About Choosing to Play Big

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Scrappy \’skra-pē\ adj: Full of fighting spirit—synonymous with having moxie, being feisty, enthusiastic, gutsy, lively,and spunky 
 
Maybe you have been told time and time again that if you pay your dues and keep plugging away, you’ll gain enough experience through “the school of hardknocks” to be successful. That might be true. But maybe you want to reach your goals faster. Maybe you want to earn more, beat the odds—and do it with class and style. If so, it’s time to get scrappy.
 
Scrappy people see big problems and come up with big solutions. Or they see ordinary challenges and find a new path to extraordinary results. They’re like the entrepreneur who turned his home into an indoor jungle—complete with waterfalls, tropical birds, and a live baboon—to sell investors on the now famous Rainforest Café restaurant chain. Or the Girl Scout who skipped the usual door-to-door cookie sales and set up a table outside a medical marijuana dispensary, selling 117 boxes in just 2 hours.
 
It can seem like these successes are just one-off acts of ingenuity or isolated flashes of brilliance...but are they? In today’s world you need more than just an occasional burst of creativity. You need a consistent attitude, a proven strategy, and a tactical plan for execution. That’s where Terri Sjodin’s Scrappy can help you, by explaining and demonstrating the unique elements behind any successful scrappy effort.
 
Drawing on research, interviews, and her own personal experience, Sjodin identifies the habits that will help you get into the right mind-set. She shares stories of scrappy tactics that have worked and those that have crashed and burned, in order to provide practical takeaways for achieving your vision, whatever it might be. She explains, for instance...

• Why getting scrappy is a choice to play big.

• How to cultivate your best ideas.

• How to manage risks and bounce back from mistakes and failures.

• How to scale a scrappy culture within anyorganization, big or small.

As Sjodin puts it, "This is not another book about persistence, although scrappy and persistent make a winning combination. Nothing annoys a persistent person more than a scrappy person who pulls off a classy, unexpected, amazing effort to land the deal, the sale, or the opportunity."

Whether you're a sales rep, a job seeker, an entrepreneur with big dreams but a small budget, or a corporate executive aiming for the next level of success, the fastest way to get what you want is to get scrappy. 

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    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2016

      In order to stand out in a sea of applicants, Sjodin's (founder, sales-training & consulting firm Sjodin Communications; Small Message, Big Impact) book suggests readers reach for unconventional and creative solutions to problems. It is a pity, however, that, with such an emphasis on innovation, this is a rather conventional business title. Like so many other similar works, it is padded with checklists, illustrations, and quizzes. Also, each bit of guidance is illustrated with anecdotes from the lives of other business owners and founders. The ideas are interesting and the stories of both successes and failures are clever and sometimes funny, though they might have been better served having been expounded aloud by a dynamic public speaker. VERDICT This would be a solid read for anyone who enjoyed Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares's Traction, Gino Wickman and Mark C. Winters's Rocket Fuel, Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler's Bold, and many more read-alikes.--Jessica Spears, Brooklyn P.L.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2016
      True to her intent, Sjodin (Small Message, Big Impact, 2011) not only defines what makes for scrappiness but also tells stories of success that, quite frankly, will inspire and provoke readers to also succeed more than her three-pronged attack methodology (attitude, strategy, execution) may. Simply, a scrappy person is a street fighter, enthusiastic, and feisty. Anyone with even a smidgen of interest in discovering how to be scrappy will get the point from the tale of the Girl Scout who sold 117 boxes in two hours, stationed outside a marijuana dispensary (with Mom). In addition to the anecdotes embedded in the narrative, Sjodin features five separate bonus stories, from the tale of securing the Dalai Lama as a marketing conference speaker to the story of how Paulo Coelho didn't give up when The Alchemist (1988) originally bombed. Her advice is motivational and sound. It's the stories that'll hook readers and convince them to add scrappiness to their emotional quotient arsenal.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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