Reviewed
by: BigAl
Genre:
Non-Fiction
Approximate
word count: 5-6,000 words
Availability
Click
on a YES above to go to appropriate page in Amazon, Barnes &
Noble, or Smashwords store
Author:
See
book description.
Description:
“I
was a failed entrepreneur for most of my life, someone who usually
surfs the internet randomly, which turned out bad for my personal and
business life. Dreams of fame and fortune were harbored, of the
prestige of being a successful entrepreneur that everyone knew and
respected.
None
of that happened.
Until
a few years ago that was.
I
discovered resources that turned me from struggling entrepreneur into
a successful and focused one.
In
‘work smarter’ you'll discover the best productivity hacks and
tools.
These
apps are all recommended by daily entrepreneurs who have used it to
achieve success.”
Appraisal:
I like
the concept of this short book. The author interviewed about 25
successful entrepreneurs about the tools they use to manage their
work and he found many used the same productivity apps which he
discusses to help the reader Work
Smarter. The book is
short on purpose. As the author puts it:
This
book is straight to the point. I didn’t see the point in drowning
you into [sic] unnecessary details.
That
quote segues nicely into the first of many complaints I had. The book
was full of typos, grammar errors, and convoluted sentences. It was
bad. In fact, it was atrocious. The number of these kinds of errors
in this work of less than 6,000 words was two to three times what I’d
find unacceptable in an 80,000 word novel. (Personally I’d find the
frequency of errors here unacceptable in a Facebook comment.) These
ran the gamut from the minor (the example above) to significant (one
app was called Dashlane twice, then Dashboard two more times). All
affected the readability.
My
second complaint is with structure. The first major section has the
heading “Necessary” and presumably lists the apps that are most
likely to be of value to most people. The two apps listed are
discussed briefly in this section, but then keep popping up in other
sections that cover other apps with functionality that overlaps these
two. It left me wondering why they were necessary if the other apps
accomplished the same thing or, if the “necessary apps” were the
best, why list the others?
Some
apps were explained reasonably well, even if just in a short
paragraph or two, in keeping with the theme of not wasting your time.
Others left me wondering. For example, one app listed is Google
Hangout. The entire explanation is “Google hangout is the
replacement for Google talk.” If you’re unfamiliar with either
app, is that going to inspire you to dig deeper?
Last,
one important piece of information was missing in the section for
many apps, where do you go for more information or to obtain the app?
If an app that runs on a smartphone (what platform an app is aimed at
isn’t always clear), then you might reasonably surmise you can find
out more and purchase them from the Google Play store for android
devices and Apple’s app store for iOS devices. But for desktop or
laptop computer apps, you’re left to your own devices.
The
one saving grace which I’ve rewarded by giving a sympathy star in
addition to the minimum of one is that Work
Smart did point me to a
couple apps I hadn’t heard of that appeared worth checking out.
Let’s hope Google knows about them.
Format/Typo
Issues:
Numerous
typos, grammar issues, and convoluted sentences.
Rating:
** Two Stars
2 comments:
Lol. I don't know why, but I'm drawn to negative reviews more so than positive ones. Congrats for making it all the way through a book full of so many typos and structural nonsense. I don't think I could have done it!
It helps when they're short, Emily. :)
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