![]() ![]() Having read ‘Gods’ Debris’, ‘The Religion War’ in addition to ‘The Dilbert Principle’, I was quite certain of Adams’ wherewithal to write on an array of topics besides management.Īlthough Adams does scrape the management landscape in ‘Stick to drawing comics’, most of the fun lies in other chapters which make up the bulk of the book. ‘Stick to drawing comics’ is not a management book and I was cognizant of this fact before I bought it. Even today, I refer to ‘The Dilbert Principle’ as much as I do ‘Seven effective Habits’. Chapters on Marketing, Sales, HR, especially, were my favorites. Despite all that I had liked the book so much that I actually took down notes – notes in which Scott Adams guides fed-up-with-management workers how to put one back on the management. I was very much aware that a lot of things mentioned in ‘The Dilbert Principle’ were nothing but a monument of author’s notional vehemence. ![]() And I still vividly recall how uncomplicatedly I could draw parallels between my own professional life at that point and the stuff mentioned in the book. My first Dilbert book was ‘The Dilbert Principle’ which I had read some four years ago. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |