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  • Which books would you recommend for learning about scaling startups?

    Sunny Kumar
    54 replies

    Replies

    JC
    The Lean Start-up is great. So much value. Think its $20 on Amazon.
    The Lean Startup by Eric Ries is a really good book ;)
    Ryan Tando - Dezbor.com
    Duply.co
    Launching soon!
    - Zero to One - The Lean Startup - The Checklist Manifesto
    David Cagigas
    The Lean Startup by Eric Ries A good read!
    Jeffery Jin
    Felo Translator
    Felo Translator
    As someone who has transitioned from being an engineer to a startup founder, I highly recommend "The Lean Startup" by Eric Ries. It provides a practical approach to building and scaling a successful startup, emphasizing the importance of continuous innovation and customer feedback. Additionally, "Zero to One" by Peter Thiel offers valuable insights on creating and dominating new markets, which is critical for startups to succeed in the long run. Lastly, "The Hard Thing About Hard Things" by Ben Horowitz is an honest and candid account of the challenges faced by startup founders and how to overcome them. These books have been instrumental in my own journey and I hope they can be helpful to you as well.
    Sergey Bunas
    Replai AI Replies for LinkedIn & Twitter
    Replai AI Replies for LinkedIn & Twitter
    Great topic! I recommend Scaling Up by Verne Harnish and The Lean Startup by Eric Ries. Both provide valuable insights into scaling startups.
    Jonayed Tanjim
    HarvyAI - Professional Email Assistant
    HarvyAI - Professional Email Assistant
    Scaling - Blitzscaling by Reid Hoffman Growth - Hacking Growth by Sean Ellis Fundamentals - Zero to One by Peter Thiel
    Subhendu Pratap Singh
    Not a book, but I would definitely recommend Paul Grahm's essays on Entrepreneurship and everything Naval Ravikant writes.
    Adithya Narayanan
    Blitzscaling by Reid Hoffman (Founder, LinkedIn) is a fantastic book about the mindset and strategies required to scale startups :)
    Sean Ellis - Hacking Growth How today's fastest-growing companies drive breakthrough success. Excellent book, trying hard to put it in practice :)
    Nick Harrision
    The Art of War Book by Sun Tzu
    Nuno Reis
    I think amazing books have already been shared. So I will share something a bit off, where you can learn lessons for the topic, even though it is not written for the topic: "The Campaigns of Napoleon - Book by David P. Chandler" This book is an excellent way to see the rise of a leader with great tactical ability and strategic decision making, and how at scale the needs for growing the ones below you and teaching them how to do your work is more important than your skill. I'm a bit of an history geek, but really, there are many lessons in agile, company management and different company stages in this one, if you are willing to make the connections. PS: Also has battle maps, but that is just a plus ;)
    Mehmet Avcı
    Rick Rubin's new book The Creative Act: A Way of Being is a must-read.
    Jake Liebersohn
    For those new to the startup world, I highly recommend 'The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers' by Ben Horowitz (Founder of A16z). Another one which I also love is 'Amp It Up: Leading for Hypergrowth by Raising Expectations, Increasing Urgency, and Elevating Intensity' by Frank Slootman (CEO of Snowflake)
    Peyt Spencer Dewar
    This thread motivated me to resume reading 📚
    Fernanda Garcia
    Monetizing Innovation - great read!
    Olatz Urrutia
    My top 3 are: -The Lean Startup: How Today’s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses -Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future -Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies
    Won Park
    DeepBrain AI
    DeepBrain AI
    I read Growth hacker
    Sagar Jaid
    1. Start with why 2. The personal MBA 3. Principles of success 4. The learn startup 5. Compounding effect 6. Zero to One 7. 80/20 principle
    Aaron Jackson
    The Lean Startup by Eric Ries A good choose