The CFO Bookshelf weekly podcast is geared toward global financial leaders who are serious about lifelong learning and reading widely.The show's 200-plus podcast catalog features well-known authors who are experts in finance, pricing, marketing, sales, operations, organizational health, and leadership.Episodes are released weekly, and the host responds to every message he gets about the shows on LinkedIn.
S1 E247 · Sat, April 12, 2025
As my consulting practice started taking off about twenty years ago, I started reading everything I could by Fred Nickols, who blogged regularly for the software vendor, SmartDraw. Fred's articles were short, to the point, and always included a simple visual framework that was easy to comprehend. I ultimately read every post on that blog. Fred is a long-time consultant who calls himself a solutions engineer. In this conversation, we talk about his favorite frameworks and the origins of those mental models.
S1 E246 · Sat, April 05, 2025
We live in a small business world where the Chief Fractional Officer is becoming indispensable. Before even considering hiring the Fractional Sales Manager, the Fractional Marketing Officer, or even the Fractional CFO, I'd start one hundred percent of the time with the Fractional Chief People Officer. Susannah Robinson has worked in big-company HR for more than twenty years. Now, as the head of a fractional people agency called Partnership for Talent, she has written a simple and pragmatic guide on organizational design for small businesses. In this conversation, we discuss her new book, Beyond the Boxes and Lines .
S1 E245 · Sat, March 29, 2025
I'm betting that over half the CFO Bookshelf listenership participate in an NCAA tournament basketball pool at the office. Accordingly, I thought I'd share a story from a basketball legend I don't think I've ever heard retold from a leadership expert during a speaking event. I end this special episode on my three favorite basketball movies. What are yours?
S1 E244 · Sat, March 29, 2025
Before I start reading a book on Warren Buffett, and there are many, I want to know if this book has been written before—the ones where the narratives essentially state the same thing about Buffett's investing style. In the case of Brett Gardner's new book on Buffett, he checks all the boxes of a fascinating investment book. It's informative, inspiring, and even entertaining. More importantly, the book Buffett's Early Investments is not a rehash of Buffett material you've read before. Instead, Brett takes us on a journey involving several of Buffett's early stock acquisitions, how they shaped and molded his later investment style, and how these deals inspired the Berkshire Hathaway business model as we know it today.
S1 E243 · Sat, March 22, 2025
When I first experienced the Cynefin Framework in an HBR article many years ago, I never tried to adapt it to my work until I interviewed Bryce Hoffman, author of American Icon and Red Teaming, a few years ago. While Bryce made the Cynefin Framework seem more understandable and accessible, Kevin Eikenberry has gone further to show leaders how to act when surrounded by varying problems they are trying to navigate with this sensemaking framework. Kevin has written nearly 20 books, and his newest title is Flexible Leadership which includes a better approach to holistic thinking, the Cynefin Framework and the use of flexors.
S1 E242 · Sat, March 15, 2025
CFO Bookshelf had never heard of Ivar Kreuger until the former Managing Director of CFO.com suggested we discuss the book, The Match King . Andy Burt joins Mark Gandy to explain why Ivar Kreuger is a financial mastermind worthy of studying and what led to his downfall. At one time, Kreuger was worth billions in today's dollars, but his empire, built on a house of debt, could not withstand the Great Depression or a subsequent audit when he tried to raise cash by liquidating a key asset. A story made for Hollywood reveals what drove Kreuger and why U.S. securities laws were created after his downfall.
S1 E241 · Sun, March 02, 2025
I recently came across a book that's been out for over 10 years by an exceptional and tenacious researcher and an engaging writer, Lodewijk Petram. His book, The World's First Stock Exchange , might be the first to explore how early investors first bought and traded shares of the VOC of this next stock exchange. The founding of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) in 1602 marked the beginning of Amsterdam’s rise from a modest market town to a global financial powerhouse. The Company’s introduction of easily transferable shares quickly led to active trading, with investors exchanging them within days. Before long, the public was engaging in complex financial maneuvers—ranging from forwards and futures to options and bear raids. By 1680, the Amsterdam market had developed techniques as advanced as those used in modern finance, topics we explore in this conversation with Lodewijk.
S1 E240 · Sat, February 22, 2025
When I think of the CFO's role, a few questions emerge: What will we invest in and reinvest in? How will we finance those investments? What about risk management? And what is the role of corporate governance in these activities? Not only does Don Chew answer those questions in his new book, but he also gives a name to all of his answers - corporate finance. In this conversation, Don Chew explains why he wrote The Making of Modern Corporate Finance and how it's different from old-fashioned corporate finance. Don's book offers insights, inspiration, and even entertainment at times. The book contains only four equations, which can relieve business students intimidated by complex math problems during their university years.
S1 E239 · Fri, February 14, 2025
A financial executive no longer loved Mondays until a health scare changed his mindset a few years ago. Ron Monteiro is a financial expert who coaches other leaders. His book is Love Mondays: A Proven Process to Bring Joy Back into Your Work Week and Life . Ron teaches us four simple steps to becoming Monday Mavericks. He then outlines seven clever tactical steps for leaders in developing Monday Mavericks. The book ends with a dozen stories about Monday Mavericks.
S1 E238 · Mon, February 10, 2025
When John Rossman is not busy delivering keynote addresses to large audiences or consulting with brands we recognize, he still finds time to write. John is making his third appearance on the show after our conversations about two of his other books: The Amazon Way and Big Bet Leadership . John's newest project is a 54-page manifesto entitled The Pig, The Lipstick, and The Playbook of Champions . It shows organizations how to escape their self-created world of mediocrity.
S1 E237 · Sat, February 01, 2025
One book critic has asked readers of The Money Trap to imagine Michael Lewis as the President of a multinational investment holding company. Instead, Alok Sama is that person after working for Morgan Stanley for sixteen years. In this sometimes lighthearted but philosophical tome, occasionally sprinkled with dark humor and cleverness, Alok shares his most interesting stories while working next to one of the wealthiest men in the world. It's a story that includes investing insights, a smear campaign, and parent heartbreak. Learn fascinating insights from an investment banker with a strong mathematical and analytical mind who loves writing and reading great literature. This may be the only time you hear Mark Zuckerberg, John Nash, and Julius Ceasar mentioned in the same conversation.
S1 E236 · Sat, January 25, 2025
David is a dermatologist whose practice can't seemingly make the money it should be. David meets a great accountant named Graham. Graham is a TOC bottleneck specialist for all types of businesses, not just manufacturing. He speaks and teaches his clients in a way that is easy to understand and can quickly implement the ideas. That's the storyline of Practice Makes Profit by Graham Scott. This book answers four questions: 1) why the money we spend on improvements rarely improves operating cash flow, 2) why business owners get stuck in a holding pattern, 3) how TOC can be used to solve simple problems, and 4) how to apply TOC outside of manufacturing. In this conversation, we address why bottleneck thinking applies to all types of businesses, why budgeting is not a solution for pairing costs, and how to offload work to non-bottlenecks.
S1 E235 · Fri, January 10, 2025
When I think of Dave Ramsey, the elimination of debt and whole life insurance policies quickly spring to mind. In addition to his demonization of universal policies, were you aware of his 8-12 rule for retirement? David McKnight joins the show to discuss the 4 percent rule for retirement, annuities, and cash-basis insurance plans based on math, pragmatism, and wisdom. These topics are key themes in David's newest book, The Guru Gap . He has also written other best-selling books, including The Power of Zero , which has sold over 400,000 copies.
S1 E234 · Sat, December 21, 2024
What would happen if a business-minded Encylopedia Brown entered the busy line of movie patrons waiting impatiently for soda and popcorn? This perspective guided Clarke Ching in writing his latest book, The Bottleneck Detective. It offers a straightforward and enjoyable reading experience, focusing on identifying bottlenecks and understanding their subsequent effects on bottleneck detection. Mark explores Clarke's FoCCCus framework and whether bottleneck detection is a learned skill or an innate talent.
S1 E233 · Sat, December 14, 2024
Are you fan of Daniel Kahneman, Dan Ariely, or Richard Thaler? Have you enjoyed books like Fooled by Randomness, Factfulness, or Thinking in Bets? If so, you may want to read Jaime Lester's new book, Pause to Think , about cognitive biases. Jaime's concise book is engaging, memorable, and accessible. It features over thirty mental and conceptual models. This discussion explores some of these concepts, including fast and slow thinking, sunk costs, satisfaction, and randomness.
S1 E232 · Sat, December 07, 2024
Glenn Hopper's newest book is AI Mastery for Finance Professionals, but the content is also for CEOs, board members, and all other organizational leaders. We keep the topics pragmatic, applicable, and example-centric in this conversation. We'll also discover what Glenn means by saying, "AI will not replace people. People who use AI will replace those who don't use AI."
S1 E231 · Mon, December 02, 2024
One of the best books I've read on leadership in several years is by a former big-company CEO who is now a professor. Willie Pietersen's third book is Leadership - The Inside Story . In this fast-moving conversation, we hear about how Nelson Mandela learned, unlearned, and relearned the central tenets of philosophy and leadership well before his vision of a unified country could become a reality. We also learn how a diamond is formed and how those three forces apply to leadership. The question that won a war is profound, as is finding out what happens when an elder dies.
S1 E230 · Sat, November 23, 2024
When I think of HP, three things quickly emerge in my mind: Deskjet and laser printers, the 12C calculator, and David Packard's The HP Way . The HP Way is one of my top 25 books written by CEOs. In this conversation, we're rolling with a book club format with a special guest who writes book summaries on his blog. Dan Lebrero is a software engineer based in Spain, and he'll help us unpack concepts such as MBO, management by walking around, profit-sharing plans, corporate offsites, growth frameworks, and philosophies on debt management.
S1 E229 · Sat, November 09, 2024
Cat Mulvihill is becoming a rising YouTube star with her video content focused on communication and presentation skills, including technology, Zoom, and personal knowledge management systems. This conversation teaches us what sets the best professionals apart from the rest on their Zoom calls. We gain insights on the best mics, videocams, and other technologies to use. We also wrap up the visit with simple ways to kill our filler words.
S1 E228 · Sat, November 02, 2024
If you work for yourself or would like to, have you ever thought about whose shoulders you are standing on, especially if you decide to have no employees? Ben Waterhouse is a professor and faculty director at the University of North Carolina. His research interests include deciphering how self-employment became a key to personal fulfillment, a central topic in his newest book, One Day I'll Work for Myself . In this conversation, we explore some of history's most pivotal stories that led to the plateau of big business starting in the late 1800s and reaching its peak in the 1970s. We learn why the move to self-employment became a potential remedy to professional and personal relevance in Ben's engaging style.
S1 E227 · Mon, October 21, 2024
Have you ever wondered how Amazon, Netflix, and Starbucks started their customer personalization programs? What was the starting point? What were the costs? Who was involved? The co-authors answer these questions in the very readable Personalized: Customer Strategy in the Age of AI . Mark Abraham and David Edelman explain that personalization is not email or glorified loyalty rewards programs. Instead, this cross-functional activity starts with a few simple questions in their 5 Promises framework, a launching pad for creating a customer personalization journey.
S1 E226 · Sat, October 05, 2024
If you were to ask me about my favorite book on private equity, I would say The Private Equity Playbook by Adam Coffey. The book is easy to read, the math is simple and impactful, and the stories are based on a former CEO who understands the intricacies behind private equity. Adam has released the second edition of this book, which is about 20 percent longer with new material. This conversation addresses the continued growth of private equity, committed capital, Adam's 70-30 rule, and a funny locksmith story.
S1 E225 · Sun, September 29, 2024
As a financial leader, I want to know every aspect of business. While quarterbacking my share of ERP implementations, I had only once heard the term PMO (short for Project Management Office). Accordingly, I wanted to learn more. After reading Laura Barnard's new book on PMOs, I quickly realized she is probably the global thought leader on this subject. Laura's new book is The IMPACT Engine: Accelerating Strategy Delivery for PMO and Transformation Leaders . We spend most of our time unpacking her IMPACT Engine System, which has a 100% success rate. In the lightning round, we cover MVPs vs. prototypes, perfectionism, lovers and haters, outcomes vs. outputs, and 30-90s.
S1 E224 · Wed, September 25, 2024
Numerous financial blog articles and LinkedIn posts highlight the benefits of a small business owner hiring a portfolio CFO. However, I do not recall these writers commenting on why financial professionals step away from the W-2 world to serve multiple owners as clients instead of sticking to a steady paycheck. Sara Daw may be the first author to articulate why CFOs jump into the gig economy through her comprehensive research, which we can read about in Strategy and Leadership as Service. In this conversation, we hit on access vs. ownership, psychological ownership, career future-proofing, and liquid vs. solid consumption.
S1 E223 · Mon, September 02, 2024
How did Charles Cowlam resort to a lifelong career in crime during the Gilded Age? During this fascinating interview, the author of A Wonderful Career Crime accidentally uncovers several fascinating nuggets of U.S. history that would otherwise remain undetected by well-known historians. Frank Garmon shares his favorite stories of Cowlam's life as a fraudster, bigamist, and swindler. He takes us to the origin of how this micro-history came to be in book form. We also learn how the wisdom of crowds revealed Cowlan's true identity in a world without LinkedIn and Facebook.
S1 E222 · Wed, August 14, 2024
Strategic planning and real estate companies are not word pairings we are used to hearing. However, Charlie Hewlett is changing that mindset. Charlie is the managing director at RCLCO, a company based in the Washington, D.C., metro area. He co-authored Strategy for Real Estate Companies. Our topics include the definition of a real estate company, a short definition of strategic planning, what strategic planning is not, SWOT, POVs, plan lengths, and who should work on the strategy process.
S1 E221 · Sat, July 20, 2024
What do you know about Jay Gould's life, and how does he compare to the other robber barons of his day? More importantly, is his life worth examining? Mark discusses Gould's upbringing in this book review, which influenced his desire to be rich. Learn about one of the most significant market corners on Wall Street and the man who helped to create America's economic expansion during the internet era of his day.
S1 E220 · Sat, July 13, 2024
Mark provides five titles in this special CFO Bookshelf episode that inspire and educate. Mark wraps up the show with some financial food for thought - what statement do you present first in a reporting package and why?
S1 E219 · Fri, July 05, 2024
What is a Fractional CFO? That term has become a household name for financial experts who help small business owners in various industries. However, do we have a concise and complete definition for this type of professional services provider? In this special episode, we break down what the fractional CFO is based on their three unique and primary roles to small business owners. We also give the best definition of a CFO you have probably never heard before.
S1 E218 · Fri, June 28, 2024
As I think about our next guest, Jody Grunden, he reminds me of the successful business leader who Mixergy's Andrew Warner should feature. Jody co-founded Summit CPA Group in the early 2000s and decided to focus on financial leadership instead of offering the conventional services many small firms provided. This discussion addresses the accounting shortage, effective accountants, and why accounting professionals have nothing to fear about AI technologies.
S1 E217 · Fri, June 21, 2024
When did you start using Excel, and how did you learn it? Jeff Lenning is the founder of Excel University, and he joins us to discuss the biggest mistakes he sees in Excel workbooks, the differences between formal and informal training, and why both are critical. We also walked down memory lane, discussing when we started using Excel and some of our favorite functions inside this powerful application. Finally, we tip our cap to two very famous Excel MVPs and why we do so.
S1 E216 · Fri, June 14, 2024
What would you be willing to do to feel alive in your work every day? Jack Craven asks executives from all walks of life this question. Jack is the author of Aliveness Mindset: Lead and Live with More Passion, Purpose, and Joy. His book includes more than a dozen tools and frameworks for starting the journey of aliveness. Some topics we hit in this conversation include where aliveness starts, David Robsen's expectation effect, the actual vs. the ideal self, anchoring mindsets, accelerance, and magic words.
S1 E215 · Fri, June 07, 2024
I list the top business books I've read over the previous year each January. At the end of 2024, The Venture Mindset by Ilya Strebulaev and Alex Dang will easily be in my top three and possibly my overall favorite. The Venture Mindset reads fast and reminds me a little of Kahneman, Munger, and books about Buffett. Some of the big ideas we cover in this episode with both authors include roof shots vs. moonshots, betting on jockeys vs. the horses, winning at the piggy bank game, and what we can learn from student VC partnerships. This book is not just for those in the VC community. There are many takeaways for those working in and running small businesses.
S1 E214 · Sat, June 01, 2024
I had never heard of Edmond Safra until I read Daniel Gross's informative and inspiring biography, A Banker's Journey . For those who knew him and did business with him, he was everyone's favorite banker. His banks never had to write off loans, and many of his early deals were on a handshake. He never needed a government bailout, nor did he ever head to DC complaining about regulations. While his professional and personal story is uplifting, the Shakespearian periods of his life include the American Express saga and how he died. During this conversation, Dan Gross gives us a dozen compelling reasons to revisit this banker's remarkable life.
S1 E213 · Fri, May 24, 2024
Our newest guest may not be a best-selling author on real estate yet, but we're already predicting this former World Cup soccer player will soon be a household name in Dave Ramsey's world in a few years. Vaughn Bethell is the founder of REI Junkies based in South Carolina, and in this episode, we learn his unique process of providing real estate investors with a different way to reduce stress and frustration in their investments.
S1 E212 · Fri, May 17, 2024
One of the best management books ever written is The Effective Executive, by Peter Drucker, published in 1966 . Managing For Results and The Practice of Management are other favorites of this show. Randy Wooton joins us to discuss the big ideas in The Effective Executive . He's a three-time CEO and has held senior positions at Microsoft and Salesforce. He is also the host of The SaaS Expert Voices Podcast and serves as Maxio's chief executive. In this conversation, we address why we study Drucker and his ideas on time management, effective decisions, knowledge workers, and setting priorities.
S1 E211 · Sat, May 11, 2024
Consumers and anyone who studies business understand the subscription economy, but what about the usage economy? What is it? How does it differ from the subscription economy? Does it matter? Adam Howatson is the CEO of LogiSense and the author of The Usage Economy . In this conversation, Adam will give examples of companies that got it right with their usage-based pricing models and those that made serious mistakes, such as Wink. We'll also learn about telemetry, AI's fit, and the most important information metrics for transitioning into the usage economy.
S1 E210 · Sat, May 04, 2024
Have you ever left a movie theater where a film left you speechless and made you feel like you needed to rewatch parts of it to figure out what you were missing? Jeff Hooke's book, The Myth of Private Equity , left me feeling that way after finishing each chapter of his tell-all book about the exaggerations and overstatements of the private equity marketing machine. During this conversation, we learned much about the myths of PE funds focused on leveraged buyouts. Some of the big ideas in this conversation include the enormous fees fund managers are collecting, the poor fund performance these funds generate, and the lack of transparency in their reporting to institutional investors. We'll also learn about one of Warren Buffett's worst investment decisions and his advice on where retail and institutional investors should invest their money.
S1 E209 · Sat, April 27, 2024
My favorite go-to person on all matters, Tableau and Dataviz, is Andy Kriebel. Andy was the first person to create a YouTube channel on Tableau. His subscriber base has surpassed 61,000, and his 750+ videos have 7.5 million views and counting. Andy is the co-author with Eva Murray of the book #Makeover Monday, and you can also follow his informative and insightful helpful hints each day on LinkedIn. In this conversation, we find out why Andy has been publishing online for more than ten years, why asking for a dashboard is rarely the right starting point for Dataviz, and why his five daily habits, which I found to be pure gold.
S1 E208 · Sat, April 20, 2024
I have my theories on why W. Edwards Deming is not a household name in 'all' business circles. Many view him as the 'quality' guy who had an impact on Japanese manufacturing after the Second World War. That view is limiting as Deming's management mindset was complete with four central tenets: Pragmatism The Law of Variation Human psychology Systems Thinking I used to recommend Mary Walton's book to start learning about Deming. That book gave way to a new title by Edward Martin Baker. After meeting and interviewing Gene Kim a few months ago, I have a favorite book on Deming by John Willis. The title is Deming's Journey to Profound Knowledge . John was one of the earliest cloud evangelists and is considered one of the founders of the DevOps movement. John is the author of 7 IBM Redbooks. He is also the co-author of the “DevOps Handbook” and “Beyond the Phoenix Project,” along with author Gene Kim. During this conversation, we discuss Deming's influences and how he became such a complete thinker about helping others improve.
S1 E207 · Fri, April 12, 2024
Cory Doctorow is a science fiction author, technology activist, and journalist. He has written many books, most recently The Bezzle, a follow-up to Red Team Blues, which are the two books we'll discuss in this episode. These two books are the beginning of a series featuring the fictional forensic accountant Martin Hench. Hench is self-employed, loves being on the red team, and rakes in 25% of the assets he can recover. Cory's books are fast-paced and entertaining but also deeply thought-provoking, especially The Bezzle. Cory has authored many books, is a long-time blogger and journalist, and hosts a podcast. You can learn more about him at his website, Craphound .
S1 E206 · Sat, April 06, 2024
Alfred Sloan's My Years with General Motors was an immediate success and is considered one of the best management books written by CEOs of his era. Before his book, we'd probably have to go back to Henry Ford's autobiography to find a management book of this popularity. And then there's Harvey Firestone's book, which CFO Bookshelf considers a gem. Originally published in 1926, the great people behind the Farnam Street blog have republished Men and Rubber , and the author's message is as relevant now as when he published it. During this episode, we hit some of the big themes in this book: Money, capital, and planning The key to selling and no superstars Treating people right and employee ownership Deep thinking and decision-making Taking time off and Ford's vagabonds
S1 E205 · Fri, March 29, 2024
Gary Stevenson grew up in an impoverished area of East London where he could hold his life's belongings in two arms. About three years after graduating from the London School of Economics, Citibank made him a millionaire at a very young age. Gary was 'all in' on winning the trading game. But did overnight success bring him happiness? And why did he want to leave the Citibank trading floor? Gary tells his story in his new book, The Trading Game , which I believe is this era's Liar's Poker , but with more life lessons shared in this special book. Some of the topics explored include: The reason why it's challenging to get a job on a trading floor Gary's childhood and how it influenced his drive to mastery The reason poor people are looked down upon by the rich Gary's first day on the trading floor in 2007 Profound thoughts on the mindset of a trader The P&Ls of traders and how they got paid The meaning of negative 4.5% interest rates Money was never Gary's driver Health and mental stress in Tokyo Advice for kids wanting to be traders Gary's YouTube channel Return to the classics
S1 E204 · Sat, March 23, 2024
Agile, DevOps, TPS, TOC, Deming's System of Profound Knowledge. Is there a mental construct or latticework that connects these robust systems? In Wiring the Winning Organization , Gene Kim and Steve Spear introduce the concepts of the three layers of work and social circuitry. The book also explains the author's three biggest learning pillars: Simplification, Slowification, and Amplification.
S1 E203 · Sat, March 16, 2024
Readers of Corporate Counsel do not need to be legal professionals to enjoy this short book writen as a business fable. Anna is leaving a prestigious law firm to become the first in-house lawyer at a regional real estate firm in the Midwest. The book includes drama, conflict, and a grey beard, Anna's guide throughout the story. Our guest is the author, Peter Carayiannis, and some of the topics we address include: Anna's first 100 days The wrong reason to hire an in-house lawyer The concept of budgets and #LegalOps The Big 3 of risk mitigation Definitions for ASLP and MLS The moral authority in a business A full-scope legal review of all corporate documents
S1 E202 · Sat, March 09, 2024
Of all the books written about Warren Buffett, I am unaware of any authors who grew up in Omaha, Nebraska and went to school with his children. Todd Finkle is the author of Warren Buffett: Investor and Entrepreneur , a book that was fourteen years in the making. If you are a Buffett student, perhaps you will have heard several of Todd's stories, but are you aware of Buffett's numerous investing mistakes throughout the years or several of Charlie Munger's thoughts on behavioral investing? In this conversation, we also discussed three of my favorite stories in the book. My favorite is the five-hour conversation between Buffett and Davy Davidson, and Todd does a great job of filling in the details. You can find additional resources to the conversation on the show notes page .
S1 E201 · Sat, March 02, 2024
John Rossman is making his second appearance on CFO Bookshelf. We interviewed him two years ago for one of our top 10 books of 2022, The Amazon Way, Amazon's 14 Leadership Principles . John's newest book which he co-authored with Kevin McCaffrey is Big Bet Leadership . Highlights from the conversation include: What is and what is not a big bet A topic for low- and high-tech companies, both Big bets are generally found in Day 1 organizations Small teams vs. R&D labs Thinking, environment, management The power of writing The portfolio of ideas with limited resources The lightning round - lazy pivot, Chief Repeating Officer, quivers, MLPs John's recent favorite books Full Show Notes
S1 E200 · Sat, January 27, 2024
Gary Harpst co-founded the ERP solution Solomon Software, which was ultimately sold to Great Plains. The CFO Bookshelf enjoys Gary's work and past books, including Six Disciplines for Excellence and Six Disciplines Revolution . Gary's newest book has been 40 years in the making. The title is Built to Beat Chaos: Biblical Wisdom for Leading Yourself and Others . A few of the themes we cover in this conversation include: addressing the elephant in the room, the integration of faith in the workplace the Great Plains story A leader's first and second responsibility the reason Monet destroyed some paintings the reason a specific management system doesn't matter based on 1200 businesses studied how to get the 85% involved and the impact on one-to-one time the 100-point exercise the Harold Morgan story wisdom and tips for learning to mentor others the purpose and mission of LeadFirst.ai
S1 E199 · Sat, January 20, 2024
A Beautiful Constrain t by Morgan and Barden: is it a marketing, branding, psychology, or management book? Or is it all four? In this episode, Willy Donaldson (Simple_Complexity and Estimated Time of Departure) and I discuss five of the biggest ideas in the thought-provoking book A Beautiful Constraint . The authors state the goal is not to eliminate a constraint but to leverage it. Their book explains how. Below are some of the topics we addressed: the definition of a constraint Goldratt's definition reasons you may not need to read the book the relationship between ambition and constraints the three-part continuum of thought: victim, neutralizer, transformer path dependence and an impactful poem can-if thinking the problem with too many resources thumbs up or thumbs down During the conversation, we mentioned this book would be a great master class where a one-hour conversation could provide all of the ideas and tools created by the authors. If you are not ready to read the book yet, this YouTube video by one of the authors is a great starting point.
S1 E198 · Sat, January 13, 2024
Since starting the CFO Bookshelf podcast, I have released a ‘favorite books’ show each January. I’ve always been reluctant to do so because my reading tastes may differ from yours. However, these episodes are some of the most downloaded in our podcast catalog. In this discussion, I list my Top 10 books, honorable mentions, fiction, and even books that I did not like. Other insights include what and how much to read and if fiction matters. Access the List
S1 E197 · Sun, January 07, 2024
Many pricing books are heavy in ideas, abstractions, and behavioral science mind-shifting. Others are focused merely on simple tactics. Jean-Manual Izaret's (JMI) book, Game Changer , fills a void by showing readers and pricing practitioners how to approach pricing strategically through cleverly designed frameworks and thought-provoking questions. This conversation starts with who should read this book and why a cover-to-cover reading is unnecessary. Other topics include: Ford's greatest insight The cupcake pricing dilemma The three pricing tools: elasticity, differentiation, game theory The reason why pricing methods and pricing strategy are not the same thing JMI's framework grid JMI's seven games Buyers, sellers, and offers A definition of pricing governance A deeper dive into the uniform game Microsoft vs. Intuit Next steps for owners and pricing teams JMI's favorite books Important Links JMI's bio page at The Boston Consulting Group TED Talk - A New Netflix-style Pricing Model
S1 E196 · Sat, December 16, 2023
CFO Bookshelf considers The Wisdom of Finance one of its favorite 25 business books. Mihir Desai combines abstract and obtuse finance concepts with literature, history, movies, and poems in his book, which was released in 2017. In this bookclub-style episode, we cover several of the themes Mihir highlighted in his educational and entertaining book: Bankruptcy (the history of Robert Morris) Options and Diversification (Pride and Prejudice) Value Creation (The Parable of the Talents) Corporate Governance (The Producers) Mergers (marriages) The Demonization of Finance (O Pioneers!)
S1 E195 · Fri, December 08, 2023
One of the best books we've read on private equity is by Adam Coffey. The title is The Private Equity Playbook . Adam's newest book is based on a two-day presentation he gave on how to roll up an industry purposely and effectively. He turned his 300-plus page slide deck into the book Empire Builder: The Road to a Billion . Some of the topics we cover include: investing in what you know a simple example using a mowing company and its unit economics the industry traits for empire building the 30:1 rule for managers the rule of 130 price escalation clauses Sandy Ogg Financial diligence and proctology exams the best way to read this five-hour book Important Links: Adam's website LinkedIn profile Adam's Forbes articles Show Notes page at CFO Bookshelf
S1 E194 · Sat, December 02, 2023
Since I am not a customer of Dunkin' Donuts, I know very little about their origin story. When Around the Corner, Around the World hit my reading radar, I was intrigued and was compelled to read it. I was pleasantly surprised because the book was a mini MBA on how to grow a small business into an international brand. Bruce Reed joins the host to uncover some of the big ideas in this book, including: working for a father after graduation knowing when and how to turn down a $7.5 million offer ideas for quarterly board meetings the author's four management pillars learning the art of exploitation and experimentation Drucker's advice on succession the author's reading list
S1 E193 · Sat, November 25, 2023
I had never considered the business aspects of pirating until I read Katherine Howe's newest book, A True Account: Hannah Masury's Sojourn Amongst the Pyrates, Written by Herself. Every ship's captain had a vision, as did the crew. A mission steered each voyage. The crew was kept in line with its bylaws or code of conduct. Loot was allocated based on a profit-sharing plan. In this conversation, Katherine reveals why moviegoers romanticize the golden era of pirating. Not only do we get a sneak preview of the characters and the plot in Katherine's new book, but we are also reminded of our country's history of public hangings and gibbeting. About Katherine Howe Katherine Howe is a New York Times bestselling and award-winning historian and novelist. She is the author of several novels for adults and young adults, has edited two volumes of primary sources for Penguin Classics, and is the co-author with Anderson Cooper of the #1 New York Times bestselling books VANDERBILT and ASTOR. You can follow her on the following social media links: Katherine's website Amazon author page Facebook Twitter Instagram Our show notes for this episode are on the CFO Bookshelf website.
S1 E192 · Sat, November 18, 2023
I'd recommend The Phoenix Project if I could only recommend one book to a CEO, CFO, or COO about the essentials or the heart of IT in a heartbeat. The Phoenix Project is the IT version of The Goal , as both are written as a novel with a protagonist with doubts, worries, and fears. Like The Goal , the main character in The Phoenix project encounters a sage who helps him glean insights from the manufacturing plant floor and apply them in a DevOps environment. Gene Kim is one of the co-authors of this special book. In this conversation with Gene, we address The Three Ways, the four types of work, internal audit, security, and why this novel has universal appeal for all industries and all professions. Important Links: IT Revolution The Idealcast with Gene Kim The DevOps bookshelf The COSO Cube (there are book spoilers) Wiring the Winning Organization Detailed show notes
S1 E191 · Sat, November 04, 2023
I cannot begin to count the number of times I've heard the following question or something similar, "Mark, I've heard my industry EBITDA multiple is 5x. What do you think?" As much as I want to scream at that question, this type of thinking on business value is prevalent amongst many CEOs of both big and small companies. When the book Quick Value by Reed Phillips hit my radar, I bought it immediately and couldn't put it down as I started reading it. Reed's process for valuing a private company is a simple but powerful method that should be completed annually by an internal leadership team. The process is easy to learn and can even replace annual strategic planning sessions. In this conversation, we learn the Quick Value process, who should use it, and some other nifty nuggets for leaders wanting to grow the value of their business, even when they do not want to sell it. Important Links The book's website Oaklins Valuation Index (sign-up is free) Reed's LinkedIn profile
S1 E190 · Sat, October 28, 2023
As much as I enjoy reading the Goldratt books and his theory of constraints (TOC), I never considered his early book, The Race , a solid and readable primer on throughput for financial minds. Several books have been published on throughput accounting since The Race was released in the early 1990s. In 2019, three TOC experts finished what I believe is now the best work on throughput accounting that even CEOs should read. The title is Throughput Economics . In this conversation, we address simple definitions such as throughput, operating expense, and investment. We learn why efficiency measurements can lead to disastrous results and why this book is not just for manufacturers. Notable links: Eli Schragenheim blog (one of the co-authors) Goldratt Bharat The Vanguard Method Kelvyn Youngman
S1 E189 · Sat, October 21, 2023
If you have read any books on pricing, the title that stands above the rest is Hermann Simon's Confessions of The Pricing Man . However, suppose you are looking for a book that includes nearly every pricing tactic ever used in business. In that case, I'd start with Handbook on the Psychology of Pricing by Dr. Markus Husemann-Kopetzky. The subtitle is 100+ effects on persuasion and influence every entrepreneur, marketer and pricing manager needs to know. While this book is for the hardcore marketer and CMO, I recommend it to CEOs and CFOs too as pricing is a vital discipline that's lacking in many small businesses. A few of the topics we cover include: Flat Rate Bias Scarcity Reciprocity $0.79 or $ 0.93 Dropping Commas The Problem with Discounting High-Quality Products
S1 E188 · Sat, October 14, 2023
One of my favorite books in the value investing niche is 100 Baggers by Chris Mayer, a title that is also worth reading for CEOs, CFOs, and all other business managers. During this conversation, Chris explains how small acorn businesses become large and strong oak trees. Other topics we hit include: the coffee can portfolio the reluctant seller owner-operators John Kelly's formula SQGLP - a power framework for finding 100 Baggers You can learn and read more about Chris Mayer on his blog .
S1 E187 · Sat, October 07, 2023
When I finished Nick Gray's The 2-Hour Cocktail Party , I immediately thought that this was the perfect follow-up book to start applying all of the teachings of Dale Carnegie in his classic, How to Win Friends and Influence Others . Beyond Nick's practical advice in teaching readers how to host a party for friends and casual acquaintances, one of my favorite insights is the power of loose connections. Nick provides the perfect device on how to make the most of those loose connections that can be fun and meaningful for years to come. In this conversation, Nick explains the purpose of a cocktail party, who to invite, what to serve, how to implement icebreakers, and what to do after a party. Important Links: How to Introduce Two People via Email: Sample Scripts 9 Career Day Speech and Presentation Ideas Party Times: Start, End, & Best Times Icebreaker Name Tags: Examples and How to Do It RIGHT How to Host an Event: Parties & Networking Where to Throw a Party? Ideas and Venues for 2023 Icebreaker Activities for Your Next Event Nick Gray's Personal Website Friendship Recession Website 7 Small Trade Show Booth Ideas for 2023
S1 E186 · Sat, September 30, 2023
As a child growing up in rural Missouri who listened to countless baseball games on the radio of my favorite baseball team, I heard the names Budweiser and Busch repeatedly over the course of many years. Because of the rise in popularity of TV shows like Riches, Succession, and Yellowstone, I was curious about the Busch family--the Kennedys of St. Louis. What became of that dynasty? How did it get started? How did it grow in fame and fortune? What caused its downfall? To find the answers to those questions, I read Bill Knoedelseder's book Bitter Brew - The Rise and Fall of Anheuser-Busch and America's King of Beers . In this conversation, we learn how the Busch family survived prohibition and why they were able to succeed in the years to come. But we also learn the reasons for the demise of the family-owned business and why they sold out to a larger brewer.
S1 E185 · Sat, September 23, 2023
Confessions of a Pricing Man is easily the best book ever written on this topic. The author is Hermann Simon, the Chairman of Simon-Kucher. He's also one of this generation's most prolific business thinkers, whose writing parallels Peter Drucker's. In this conversation, our topic is Hermann's 2021 book, True Profit . Topics include profit maximization, the reason why pricing as a profit lever trumps volume increases or cost reductions, and the differences between profit and free cash flow.
S1 E188 · Fri, September 15, 2023
I predict that Number Go Up will be considered the most fascinating and entertaining book in narrative non-fiction for 2023. Our guest is Zeke Faux, an investigative reporter. Several years ago, he was asked to check out Tether and the money supporting that cryptocurrency. Zeke had no idea that story would take him across the globe, logging many air miles along the way. If you are challenged or intimidated by the vocabulary surrounding cryptocurrencies, we attack about ten terms to lay the groundwork for the stories Zeke tells us later in the interview.
S1 E187 · Fri, September 08, 2023
Dan Murray is the author of Tableau Your Data , and he recently published a blog series called The BI Cantos . The 21-post series is about how to successfully deploy a business intelligence system. Dan is the Director of Strategic Innovations at Interworks, where he has spoken across the country with audiences, including many in the Fortune 500. What exactly is business intelligence? What are the best tools to use? How do we separate fact from fiction in these implementations? And what is the best way to find a consultant? Dan answers these questions and more as this episode is geared toward those embarking on a new BI journey. The BI Cantos Blog Series - LINK
S1 E186 · Sat, September 02, 2023
Joel Salatin is more than a gifted farm entrepreneur in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Joel is the author of twelve books and speaks around the globe on not just farming but simultaneously protecting and replenishing the land. The book we focused on was Folks, This Ain't Normal , which includes plenty of satire and humor. Our topics included open-book farming, the difference between buying natural vs. processed food, and several fascinating concepts revolving around money. If you want to learn more about Joel after listening to the interview, I'd start with this site as a launching pad: TheLunaticFarmer.com . You can read the full show notes on this episode on our website.
S1 E185 · Fri, August 25, 2023
One of my favorite 25 business books is The Halo Effect by Phil Rosenzweig. During this conversation, Phil explains the halo effect, along with several other delusions business leaders are bombarded with daily from the press, business authors, and consulting gurus. Other highlights include: remedies for overcoming the halo effect heuristic research flaws in Good to Great backward causalities business culture and financial performance "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." greed and hubris Phil's favorite business books
S1 E184 · Fri, August 18, 2023
As I search for books to highlight on the show, I'm looking for unique and interesting content and an author who has probably slipped under other podcasters' radars. Take, for instance, the title Rasputin for Hire by Michael Goodman. Michael is a marketing expert who has been consulting since 1979. In this conversation, we hear about the story behind this fascinating title and: the difference between his book and Dan Pink's first title, Free Agent Nation why new consultants have to love selling the problem with cold leads on working alone how to use peer networks having confidence in one's own abilities personal mission statements consulting between jobs a fascinating Seth Godin story A special thanks to my friends at JustPaddles.com .
S1 E183 · Fri, August 11, 2023
I never knew there was a consulting niche for advising directors for public company boards of directors until I met Denise Kuprionis. She founded The Governance Solutions Group (GSG) based in Cincinnati, where she helps boards apply effective governance practices and achieve their most pressing objectives. In this conversation, some of our topics include: The way Denise finds clients to work with The biggest difference between her board work today and ten years ago - there are not many Board assessments Corporate vs. board governance CEO succession planning and when to start Tone at the top The role of a board of advisors in private companies Sandra Kurtzig's first advisory group This conversation also applies to private companies as Denise shares valuable nuggets for private company CEOs who could use the support of advisory board members to fill gaps where specialized knowledge is lacking.
S1 E182 · Fri, August 04, 2023
After reading a book by a successful commercial developer who moved his family to France for two years, I wanted to learn more about setting up shop in a foreign country. That's because the real estate developer faced obstacle after obstacle because he wasn't used to the vast cultural divide between his home country and France. Accordingly, I felt I struck oil when I found the book, The Business Accidental Nomad by Kyle Hegarty. Kyle shares his experiences in building a marketing and sales presence in Asia based on data and humorous and engaging stories. I'll go so far as to say this book has a Liar's Poker feel to it; it's that good. Some of the big ideas we hit in this conversation include: the 70% failure rate in starting an international operation stereotyping vs. data-driven generalizations calibrated storytelling - evidence and anecdotes "Treat people the way they want to be treated" TOR - trust, openness, and respect The communications contract The role of DISC for hiring new staff
S1 E181 · Tue, August 01, 2023
One of my favorite business authors has just released his 15th book. The title is Own Your Work Journey by Ed Hess. Fans of Ed Hess will be treated to a mini-memoir in the introduction of the book, and we spend the first ten minutes of this conversation talking about some of the mentors in Ed's life during his upbringing as a youth. Other key points we hit are: the quiet ego and the wild stallion that's brought under control emergent thinking inner peace while having an open mind the keys to reflecting, listening the skill of developing skills at a fast pace the ongoing concept of learning, unlearning, and relearning the primary reason our brains are not wired to be hyper-learners
S1 E180 · Sat, July 29, 2023
The best book I've ever read on the topic of growth is by Ed Hess, and it's aptly named Smart Growth . It's not an anti-growth book, but through research, it dismantles the mental model of what I call Wall Street Growth which is: 1. Businesses have to continually grow or die 2. All growth is good 3. Growth has to be continuous and smooth 4. Quarterly growth is the primary measure of success In this conversation with Ed Hess, we discuss some of his favorite case studies in the book, the opposite of the 'grow or die' mindset, and the ideal work environment where people can continually be learning, unlearning, and relearning.
S1 E179 · Fri, July 21, 2023
According to cognitive psychologist Gary Klien, people with a seemingly high sixth sense become experts at pattern recognition through years of experience in their respective fields. But where does that experience come from? How does that person achieve such experience? Soren Kaplan is the author of the 2023 book Experiential Intelligence . Soren explains the differences between experiential intelligence (XQ) and IQ and EQ (emotional intelligence). In this show, we also hit topics such as: curiosity, empathy, and imagination XQ vs AI the three levels to building XQ Soren's favorite stories in his book the reason why every high school student should be aware of Soren's message the role of failure in XQ Both/And the corporate university concept forecasting the past Who is Soren Kaplan? Soren Kaplan wrote Experiential Intelligence to explore the idea that experience is a form of innovation and to help individuals and organizations develop their ability to create and innovate through their experiences. Soren was inspired to write the book by his work with a variety of companies and organizations, and his observation that the most successful innovators were those who were able to learn from their experiences and use them to drive new ideas and breakthrough results. Kaplan also saw a need for a new framework that could help individuals and organizations develop the skills and mindset needed to leverage experience as a driver of innovation. He believes that by cultivating experiential intelligence, individuals and organizations can become more agile, adaptable, and successful in today's rapidly changing world.
S1 E178 · Fri, July 14, 2023
One of the most intriguing and thought-provoking management books I've ever read is the 1993 book, Maverick by Ricardo Semler. Ricardo took over his father's business Semco not too long after he graduated from college. He knew he didn't want to run the business as his father had, so he started in small steps by getting his staff involved in all decisions of the business, not just small ones. The results were phenomenal. In less than ten years, Semco grew 6x in spite of inflation, recessions, and a chaotic national policy Productivity grew 7x, profits up 5x, and one newspaper ad during this time period yielded 1.4k responses. Even though Maverick is no longer in print, I still wanted to talk about it on the show. FP&A global thought leader Daniele Martins joins us to discuss the book from her unique perspective. To learn more about the Ricardo Semler story along with participative leadership, here are a few resources: Managing Without Numbers - HBR Ricardo's Ted Talk - How to Run a Company With Almost No Rules Semco Style Institute Corporate Rebels Shownotes on the CFO Bookshelf website
S1 E177 · Sat, July 08, 2023
Gareth Pronovost is my go-to expert on his YouTube channel, GAP Consulting, where he teaches his subscribers about Airtable, SmartSuite, automation techniques, and other great insights on no-code solutions. In this conversation, Gareth discusses how to break spreadsheet addiction. Other topics include: Gareth's interesting entry point to no-code apps the best definition for no-code applications what no-code is not the best starting point for no-code applications combining no-code apps with automation Gareth's go-to no-code tools The future of Python Is no-code only for non-developers? Is no-code only for simple projects? Gareth is the founder of GAP consulting, and you can learn more about his work on his website .
S1 E176 · Fri, June 30, 2023
Technology with the advancement of generative AI is seemingly moving at a pace we've never seen with other innovations. How does any organization step back and figure out how to adopt digital and AI technologies to support its strategic objectives? That's where Rewired comes in. The subtitle for this new book is The McKinsey Guide to Outcompeting in the Age of Digital and AI . Our guest is Eric Lamarre, one of the co-authors of this practical playbook. In this conversation, we address: the origin story of the book five myths surrounding digital and AI transformations the harsh realities of starting a transformation the domain approach to getting started getting the team right the role of the CTO - chief transformation officer digital skills mapping talent win rooms employee value propositions quarterly business reviews pilot purgatory go & see visits Digital 101
S1 E175 · Sat, June 24, 2023
More Than a Numbers Game is rich in business and accounting history. We learn about the Merchants of Venice and why they had a strategic advantage. We also learn about the many flaws and imperfections of financial reporting, where completeness and consistencies are impossible. This conversation is geared toward non-accounting students and professionals where additional topics include the one-page report by the early railroads, what was included in the first modern financial report in 1903, the many names for the bottom line, Sarbanes–Oxley, and a stronger focus on liberal arts in higher education.
S1 E174 · Fri, June 16, 2023
When I finished reading Next Generation Retail by Deborah Weinswig and Renee Hartmann, my first thought was that the great ideas in this book apply to direct-to-consumer manufacturers and professional services firms. In this conversation, co-author Renee Hartmann helps us to understand better the following technologies that are not just for big companies: metaverse blockchain live streaming social commerce data and the CORE framework retail media quick commerce supply chain Headless CaaS
S1 E173 · Sat, June 10, 2023
Derek Lidow is a former business founder of a major global semiconductor company that he ultimately sold. Today, he's a professor at Princeton, where he teaches entrepreneurship, the topic of his newest book, The Entrepreneurs . This book is rich with historical stories of entrepreneurs doing the same things in the past as they are doing today. In this deeply insightful conversation with Derek Lidow, we learn the three major traits of entrepreneurs, the origin of the term creative destruction, the role of outsiders in business innovation, the concept of swarming, and the law of unintended consequences.
S1 E169 · Fri, June 02, 2023
When Walter Chrysler built his New York skyscraper in the early 1930s, his critics stated the building was a monument created for himself. The same comment could have been applied to John Jakob Raskob's justification for building The Empire State Building. In this book club-style conversation, John Coe and I dissect the book, The Birth of a Building . The author's book addresses how a book is conceived, financed, designed, and constructed. Unlike Chrysler and Raskob, this book starts with a purpose and a philosophy for any real estate undertaking. Our guest is John Coe, the podcast host of Icons of DC Area Real Estate .
S1 E168 · Fri, May 26, 2023
Curiosity drives much of the content on this podcast, and when Erik Hanberg's book, The Little Book of Boards, showed up in my email, I felt compelled to buy it for several reasons. Of the six or seven boards I've served on, some have been boring experiences, others have been exceptional. I was curious if this book would have been valuable to me during my first board experience, which wasn't great--it definitely would have been. While Erik's background is in the non-profit world, this book and conversation apply to any organization. Some big ideas we hit are performing due diligence for the board you are considering, getting involved outside board meetings, strategic planning, compensation committees, and mission statements.
S1 E167 · Mon, May 22, 2023
Not only is Neil Dahlstrom the author of the business historical narrative Tractor Wars , but he's also the Branded Properties and Heritage Manager at John Deere. Before that, he was Deere's Corporate History and Archives Manager. Neil admits he wanted to be Indiana Jones when he grew up and even worked in a museum in high school. During this conversation, we learn what a corporate archivist does, how to start a company archive, and how to start a career in this field.
S1 E166 · Sat, May 20, 2023
All of us have heard of the cola wars, the tennis shoe wars, and certainly the PC wars. But the tractor wars? Neil Dahlstrom is a historian and archivist for John Deere, and he's the author of Tractor Wars , a historical narrative of the race to be the top manufacturer of power farming at the turn of the twentieth century. Will it be International Harvester, Ford, or the much smaller player, John Deere? Neil's book is a story of what-ifs, including pricing wars, business rollups, marketing insights, and bold moves by Henry Ford.
S1 E165 · Sat, May 13, 2023
Derek Sivers was an accidental business founder. All he wanted to do was put his music online and sell it online before the dotcom bubble when PayPal did not exist yet. During one four-year period, his revenues jumped from $1 to $20 million while his staff count surged from 8 to 85. He eventually sold CD Baby for $22 million in 2008. Derek tells his founder's story in the book, Anything You Like . Since it's a book I recommend to every CFO, I invited Hannah Munro, the host of the CFO 4.0 podcast, to unpack this story full of ups and downs for this fascinating business founder. If you like books similar to Shoe Dog and Derek's, we list our top ten titles in this unique leadership genre. You can revisit that list here: Books Similar to Anything You Like and Shoe Dog .
S1 E164 · Fri, May 05, 2023
One of the best books we've read in 2023 is the story of Dame Stephanie 'Steve' Shirley, who started a business of women freelance programmers in a male-dominated world in the 1960s based in London. The bookends of this remarkable story include an escape from the Holocaust from her homeland in Austria to her new adopted country in England, thanks to Kindertransport. While there are many business insights in Steve's book, Let It Go , she pulls back the curtain to reveal the many ups and downs in her family life, including the love, care, and hardship of raising a son who was profoundly autistic. The other bookend describes Steve's goal of co-ownership with her staff, along with the gifting of many millions of dollars through philanthropic causes. Read the show notes - LINK
S1 E163 · Fri, April 28, 2023
We learned many linear frameworks in business school to help us solve simple to complex problems. Yet, systems thinking was probably missing from that curriculum. The Fifth Discipline (Senge) and Systems Thinking (Meadows) are typical starting points for learning systems thinking. However, those books are not written from a business person's perspective. Simple Complexity , by Dr. William (Willy) Donaldson, is the most readable and pragmatic book I've read on systems thinking. The author has a business background and uses stories from the field to simplify what otherwise would be obtuse and confusing concepts. In this conversation, we will learn the bare essentials of systems thinking and how to apply this skill in our organizations.
S1 E162 · Fri, April 21, 2023
David Axson is called a CFO whisperer, but I'm also calling him an expert on calling the flaws and weaknesses of some of the biggest name management tools and systems from the past that are still influencing our decision-making today. David is the author of the 2010 book, The Management Mythbuster. In this conversation, we hit on a variety of topics, such as: annual budgeting performance pay calendar-driven reporting informational vs. analytical data EBITDA management GURUs cost allocation We wrap up with David's appreciation for the business classics, and we'll hear his five favorites. Show Notes: Read Here
S1 E161 · Fri, April 14, 2023
Behind his back, I call him a Peter Drucker. He's the co-host of one of my favorite podcasts, 2Bobs . He's also the author of six business books. His name is David C. Baker, and I could listen to him all day with his pearls of wisdom on accumulating and sharing expertise with others. David's newest book is Secret Tradecraft of Elite Advisors . You do not need to be a third-party business advisor to appreciate this conversation. The content of this book applies to anyone who is a knowledge worker.
S1 E160 · Fri, April 14, 2023
Are you curious about the origin story of the CFO Bookshelf podcast? The great people at Oracle NetSuite wanted to know that about a year earlier when they asked that question during one of their webinars. In this recording, the Head of Marketing at Netsuite, Ranga Bodla, asks the host of CFO Bookshelf why he started the show, who his favorite guests and been, and even some conversations that didn't turn out too well.
S1 E159 · Fri, April 07, 2023
I enjoy reading books by transparent business founders who are not afraid to let their guard down in the stories they share. Titles quickly coming to mind are Boss Life by Paul Downs, Anything You Want by Derek Sivers, and Wild Company by the founders of Banana Republic. High on my list in this genre is What it Takes by Raegan Moya-Jones, the gritty and successful co-founder of aden + anais . Like many startup arcs, this book reveals many obstacles encountered by founders: necessary startup capital, constant cash constraints, people issues, supply chain inefficiencies, and other frustrations. More importantly, Raegan gives us a firsthand look at the challenges of creating and building a business in a male-dominated space. Her research in the book and the advice provided in this conversation are inspiring and insightful. Episode Highlights, Q&A with the Host, and Bookclub Starter Questions: Link
S1 E157 · Sat, April 01, 2023
Do you know what a donor-advised fund (DAF) is? Until this conversation, I knew very little about DAFs. Jake Wood founded Groundswell, whose mission is to democratize and revolutionize philanthropy for everyone. They do that through technology and DAFs. In this conversation, we find out what DAFs are, how to set them up, who can sponsor a DAF, and why they offer tax advantages to donors.
S1 E156 · Sat, March 25, 2023
Mad Men's Harry Crane has found that his colleague makes $100 a week more than he does. He believes he deserves a raise, and through some fear and trepidation, he gets an extra $25 more per week from his intimidating boss. But do you think he's happy? How about you? Are you paid fairly? If not, how do you know? What are your thoughts on minimum wage vs. a living wage? Do you believe in pay transparency and salary surveys? In the compensation world, David Buckmaster probably needs to introduction. He's the author of Fair Pay . In this conversation, we're going to hear about some of the challenges and solutions on the topic of fair pay.
S1 E155 · Tue, March 21, 2023
CFO Bookshelf does not sit in the seat of judgment, nor does it play the role of pundit in the midst of the 2023 banking crisis we are witnessing. We'll let the regulators and the media handle those duties. Instead, CFO Bookshelf is about old and revolutionary ideas that we can put to work right now in our organizations. As I have been monitoring the news of the Silicon Valley Bank closure and similar banks that are failing, four mental models or frameworks have come to mind. In this episode, I share 4 mental constructs that come from the banking industry playbook that we can apply in our own businesses. These ideas include: CAMELs Stress testing paired with resilience testing The Texas Ratio Reputation Risk Show notes page - Read Here
S1 E154 · Fri, March 17, 2023
I've heard some startup founders say that every graduate should spend a year or two working in government before embarking on their chosen career path. For business students, I believe every new graduate should consider running or managing a restaurant for one to two years because of the people, financial, and entrepreneurial skills needed to keep the store afloat. I'm thrilled to have Ken McGarrie on the show to talk shop about his industry and his book, The Surprise Restaurant Manager . This conversation is especially geared toward those of us outside the food service industry, but those working in it will gain valuable insights from the COO of Fabio Viviani Hospitality.
S1 E153 · Sat, March 11, 2023
Author and HBR contributor Peter Cappelli asserts that accounting and financial reporting are wreaking havoc on damaging HR decisions by corporate leaders. In this conversation, Peter reveals that 90% of all company vacancies were filled internally prior to 1980. Today, that number is just over 20%. He adds that there were very few layoffs more than 40 years ago. Today, layoffs make headlines weekly. Peter believes these results are being driven by accounting and financial reporting. In this episode, we'll also hear about financial reporting's impact on defined contribution plans, training and development, R&D, and layoffs. Peter Cappelli's newest book is Our Least Important Asset (July 2023).
S1 E151 · Thu, March 02, 2023
What is the best book on the story of Apple Computer? This week's guest states that Return to the Little Kingdom is the best of all of the Apple books on the history of this iconic growth story dating back to the pre-startup days thru the most successful sales years of the Apple II computer. Our guest is David Kopec, the moderator of the podcast Business Books & Co. David is a history buff on the early days of Apple and on their journey to becoming a unicorn. Expect to hear some stories you've never heard before.
S1 E152 · Thu, March 02, 2023
I'm periodically scouring the podcast universe for other shows focusing on business books. I recently found Business Books & Co. founded by three buddies who went to school together. Within three weeks, I listened to their first three seasons of episodes. As a fan of the show, I'm thrilled to hear the origin story of this podcast with their moderator David Kopec. In this show, we learn how a book club turned into a podcast, how books are selected, their favorite episodes, the books they didn't like, and an update on season four.
S1 E150 · Sat, February 25, 2023
Jeff Polovick started Canadian-based Driving Force with just $80,000 and just a few years of experience. That modest investment has been parlayed into $400 million in revenues with 675 employees. Jeff's book is Why Can't We , and like many startup stories, there's drama, adversity, success, more adversity, and even an exit. In this conversation, we talk about continuous and lifelong learning, family, adversity, and Jeff's value system.
S1 E149 · Fri, February 17, 2023
He gained the world. He then lost the world and those who were the closest to him. But he never lost his soul while hitting the lowest of lows in a federal penitentiary that once housed John Gotti. Shaun Hayes was once at the top of the banking world in St. Louis until he was in the wrong place at the wrong time during one of the worst recessions ever, which led to approving bank loans that violated state and federal laws. Shaun tells his story in his book, The Gray Choice, where we learn about a young man with entrepreneurial instincts as a teenager. After college, he worked for a larger-than-life legendary banker in Kansas City. That work took him to St. Louis to grow that bank's presence in that region. A few years later, Shaun bought into his first bank, which would become a small $1 billion empire that went public. Shaun points out that his gray choices started well before he was arrested, which is the topic of this conversation.
S1 E148 · Sat, February 11, 2023
We recently watched a video by the CEO of the UK-based retail chain, Timpson. We loved the material so much that we found a book by the company's chairman, Sir John Timpson. The title is based on how the business is run, Upside Down Management . According to Business Sale Report , Timpson is now a 2,000-branch-strong business with turnover totaling £300m and profits of up to £20m. In this conversation, we break down John's book into three big ideas, which include the hiring of ex-offenders, putting money in the till and acting the part, and unconventional management tactics in a large organization.
S1 E147 · Sat, February 04, 2023
Of the nearly two thousand books that the producer of CFO Bookshelf has read, there is one title he has gifted the most to CEOs than any other title. That book is Executive Toughness by Dr. Jason Selk. In this episode, we learn three of Mark's favorite big ideas in Jason's short and fast-based book: 1) product and process goals, 2) written daily debriefs, and 3) relentless solutions focus. Two other titles are also mentioned that are excellent companions to Jason's book.
S1 E146 · Sat, January 28, 2023
Last year, one of our top episodes was our favorite books of 2021. We're at it again this year with our Top 10 books for 2022. We also share our favorites in fiction along with a handful of honorable mentions. Rounding out the lists of favorites include unexpected surprises, books we didn't like, books that were worth rereading in 2022, and our heavy favorite for 2023.
S1 E145 · Fri, January 27, 2023
The subscription economy is alive and well for products-based businesses and the software industry. But how about professional services firms? Does the subscription model apply to accountants, lawyers, consultants, marketers, and other professionals? Ron Baker founded VeraSage Institute, the leading think tank dedicated to teaching value pricing to professionals worldwide. He's the co-host of The Soul of Enterprise podcast, and he's the author of numerous books, including his newest title, Times Up! In this conversation, we talk about the necessary mindset needed for professional firms to shift to a subscription model. Outputs vs. transformations. Easing in or starting a brand new model? Technicians vs. professionals and the role of intellectual capital. And finally, we address one of the biggest questions every professional will ask, "How will we price this?"
S1 E144 · Sat, January 21, 2023
What can any business or financial leader learn from a twenty-year vet in the fire service? I'm now calling John Cuomo the John Maxwell for firefighters and other public safety officials based on his book, Leadership Refined by Fire . John has always been interested in leadership and lifelong learning, and his book is full of stories, inspiration, and big ideas that can be applied to any playing field. He ends his book on mental health, specifically PTSD, the last topic we address in this conversation.
S1 E143 · Sat, January 14, 2023
As a financial expert, could you estimate the cost savings in the U.S. alone through the country's use of daylight savings time? Benjamin Franklin's estimates in 1784 yielded about $200 million in savings in today's dollars if people lived their days by making the best use of daylight. David Prerau is the leading expert on daylight savings time, and his book, Seize the Daylight , explores not just the history of DST, but also the other two forms of artificial time--Greenwich Mean Time and the introduction of time zones.
S1 E142 · Sat, January 07, 2023
I love investment books. It's a topic I could talk about for hours if allowed. I also started listening to the podcast Investing by the Books produced by the Nordic investment banker Redeye. The hosts are Eddie Palmgren and Niklas Sävås, and they are great. Both are lifelong learners and they love books on investing. In this show, we're going to talk about the best investment books that Eddie and Niklas have ever read. We'll find out their favorite book about Buffett. We'll also get more insights on Mr. Market, durable businesses with a competitive advantage, and the Ackman Paradox. Important Links: Investing by the Books podcast Redeye
S1 E141 · Fri, December 30, 2022
Gordon was an IT professional who took lifelong learning seriously. He joined a public utility district (PUD) because it stood for collaboration, communication, and support. Those core values at the PUD started deteriorating as a new leader focused on personal gain and power pushed for a new $8 million ERP solution without his most important team members to manage the implementation. Gordon Graham is the author of The Intrepid Brotherhood, which provides the story leading up to the day he was pushed out of the organization. The final chapters reveal the jury's verdict on Gordon's termination. This is a business book without trying to be like one. Readers will learn how not to manage an ERP implementation. We learn how easily corporate governance at the board level can fall apart. We also gain unique leadership and ethical insights from an IT professional's viewpoint. Show Notes to Episode
S1 E140 · Sat, December 17, 2022
John Seddon is the founder of The Vanguard Method and is the author of Beyond Command and Control . In this conversation we find out which action is worse in business, commanding or controlling. John also explains demand failure, break-fix systems, and the destructive nature of budget management and arbitrary targets.
S1 E139 · Sat, December 10, 2022
Devin Durrant is the author of The Values Delta - A Small and Simple Way to Make a Positive Difference in Your Personal and Professional Life . Durrant's book is not about corporate values but personal core values, and it's a fast, easy-to-read guide that's instructive and inspiring with practical business applications too. In this conversation, this former NBA player reveals three simple questions that can lead to transformation in our personal and professional lives.
S1 E138 · Sat, December 03, 2022
Gaining media attention may not be an ongoing goal for many growing businesses. However, a former TV host and Emmy-award winner in consumer reporting explains that if we can pitch the media effectively, we can sell anything to anyone. Katrina Cravy is the author of On Air: Insider Secrets to Attract the Media and Get Free Publicity . This easy-to-read book also has far-reaching applications, for presentations, pitches of any type, and YouTube videos. This fast-paced conversation includes Katrina's impactful H.A.V.E. formula, the power pose, the seven-second rule, killer-filler words, and much more.
S1 E137 · Fri, November 25, 2022
When we do our weekly shopping at the grocery store, finding products is relatively easy because of the way food items are grouped throughout the aisles. That's the starting point for understanding category design in any business setting. The authors of Play Bigger did not invent category design, but these gifted marketers gave this term and its underlying disciplines a name by studying more than five thousand businesses. In this conversation, co-author Al Ramadan explains what category design along with some of the book's biggest ideas: the 6-10 rule, points of view, and different vs. better. You'll also hear why Mark believes this book can be a replacement for strategic planning and why he loves chapter 10 of Play Bigger .
S1 E136 · Sat, November 19, 2022
Output, Outcomes, Impact. Those are three strong words that seemingly go well together in any context. But is there a clear difference in each term? Josh Seiden is the author of Outcomes Over Output , and he provides one of the best definitions of outcomes I have ever heard--a change in customer behavior that leads to better business results. In this conversation, we learn how to apply outcomes-based thinking in any business environment along with hearing about a case study that ended in positive results when applying the philosophies in this book.
S1 E135 · Sat, November 12, 2022
I've always assumed that great financial modelers have deep backgrounds in either corporate finance or accounting. That's not the case for Lyndsey Weber who is the Senior Solutions Consultant at Quantrix. Lyndsey's degree is in engineering management from one of the top engineering programs in the country. She started her career at ExxonMobil where she was a supply chain data analyst and an S&OP supervisor. After some three years, she had an itch for pivoting her career into PreSales, a story I find unique, fascinating, and informative. In this conversation, we learn the steps that Lyndsey took to prep, investigate, and apply for positions in PreSales.
S1 E134 · Sun, November 06, 2022
Several years ago, I'll never forget when a tax partner with a Top 10 accounting firm started talking about one of his favorite books. He described the book's three pillars - marketing, production, and accounting. I smiled because I knew the title he was talking about - In The Black by Allen Bostrom. A few weeks prior to this episode the marketing team for this book's co-author reached out to ask if they could be on the show. The answer was a resounding yes. Roger Knecht is the President of Universal Accounting. He's also the perfect person to explain why accounting is anything but boring.
S1 E133 · Sat, October 29, 2022
On Will Guidara's 12th birthday, he had the experience of a lifetime while dining with his family at Four Seasons. Less than thirty years later, Will and his co-partner of Eleven Madison Park were being lauded for the top spot of The World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2017. Will's new book is Unreasonable Hospitality and I now call it one of the best books written on this topic. The book is part memoir and many parts of inspiration, encouragement, and instruction. In this conversation, Will explains the 95-5 rule, restaurant smart vs. corporate smart, pre-meal meetings, and the primary reason hospitality can be taught in any business.
S1 E132 · Sat, October 22, 2022
You probably know a little or a lot about a business practice called open book management. This podcast prefers the term, financial transparency. During this episode, a CEO and co-founder of a physical therapy organization explains how he got started with financial transparency, why he did it, and how. Dr. Arlan Alburo of Orthopedic and Balance Therapy based in rural Indiana near Chicago also explains that he shares non-financial metrics and how his team members can impact each of those critical numbers. Think of this conversation as a mini MBA in financial and operational acumen that's practical and easy to understand. Link to episode highlights on our website: What is Financial Transparency?
S1 E131 · Fri, October 14, 2022
The Crazy Eddie stores of the 1980s are probably most remembered by the Jerry Carrell commercials that have been parodied in the movies, TV shows, and even by other CEOs in the past such as Steve Ballmer. Gary Weiss is the author of Retail Gangster, The Insane, Real-Life Story of Crazy Eddie . Through Gary's research and captivating narrative, we learn the origin story of Eddie Antar and how he first started various skimming schemes to both undercut competitors and stash untaxed sales and profits in bed mattresses and overseas bank accounts. We also learn about one of the masterminds of Crazy Eddie's IPO and the fraud that was required to support a high stock price following the public offering. Finally, we hear about how the house of cards crumbled and the family's failed attempt to take the company private in order to hide their misdoings. Mark's Notes on Retail Gangster
S1 E130 · Sat, October 08, 2022
As of the release date of this episode, the prime interest rate in the U.S. had surpassed six percent, nearly double the rate a few months earlier. Are higher rates good or bad for the economy? What about lower rates? The answers may seem self-evident, but should we be over-confident with our opinions? What about the law of unintended consequences when rates are universally low for an extended period of time? Additionally, how are rates determined? Why do they go up or down? What is the history of interest? We learn the answers to all of these questions and more as we hear from Edward Chancellor, the author of The Price of Time .
S1 E129 · Sat, October 01, 2022
Sophie Theen is the author of The Soul of Startups . Sophie states that there is a misconception that a company's people make its culture. Instead, that culture starts at the top and works its way down into other teams which is consistently changing. And that can lead to unplanned and unforeseen consequences for the staff working in these startups. In this conversation, we learn about the three audiences this book is intended for. We learn that people do indeed leave bad companies, not necessarily bad bosses or managers. And we get some great advice for any person thinking about a role in a startup.
S1 E128 · Fri, September 23, 2022
Dr. Sam Savage is the gifted teacher all of us would have loved having as our professor in stats classes. Sam is the author of The Flaw of Averages and Chancification . During this conversation, we talk about the arithmetic of uncertainty, probability management, and the limitations of risk matrixes. And we do it on a fifth-grade level.
S1 E127 · Sat, September 17, 2022
Thomas Erikson is the author of Surrounded by Idiots , a book that simplifies four basic personality types using a coloring system and a two-by-two matrix. In this conversation, we address: the difference between the four letters in DISC and the colors the purpose and role of personality assessments in the workplace the validity and reliability of such assessments the three parts of the human mind Some people believe personality assessments are bogus. Others live and swear by them. Regardless of where you are on this spectrum, we address the questions you have about any type of personality assessment.
S1 E126 · Sat, September 10, 2022
Can you think of a top business book exclusively for professional services firms? If so, your list is probably short and presumably headed by any title from David Maister. In this episode, a new book for this industry is introduced, The Boutique: How to Start, Scale, and Sell a Professional Services Firm by Greg Alexander. In this conversation, we talk about elephant and rabbit hunters, the one-thirds of billings, the only three types of firms in existence, and two critical metrics that buyers of professional services firms are examining closely.
S1 E125 · Sat, September 03, 2022
If we think the reasons for the fall of BlackBerry are an open and shut case, we need to think again. Sean Silcoff is the co-author of Losing the Signal . The book covers the rise of BlackBerry, how its foundation started cracking before Apple's iPhone came on the scene and the breakup of two iconic founders of a company that once topped $20 billion in revenues. This interview explores some of the highs and lows in this story, a very readable narrative that also serves as a great business case study. Finally, we ask if there could have been a different ending. The ideas you hear might surprise you.
S1 E124 · Fri, August 26, 2022
When I read a biography, I want the words to jump out by telling me something I never knew about the person that's both memorable and interesting. I want to read about the subject's impact they had on others. And, I want to be inspired. Before reading Dirk Smillie's very readable and accessible biography on Harry Guggenheim entitled, The Business of Tomorrow , I knew nothing about this iconic family name. While one business publication heralded Harry as the godfather of flight during his day, there is so much more about this larger-than-life historical figure of the 20th century warranting a closer look at what made him special.
S1 E123 · Wed, August 24, 2022
Should professionals like you and I be reading fiction and if so, why? Dr. Christine Seifert is the author of a 2020 HBR article, The Case for Reading Fiction. While professionals typically read for knowledge, Christy provides numerous reasons and studies on how reading fiction can expand our analytical abilities along with understanding others better. We explore terms such as cognitive agility and acuity, design fiction, openness to experience, and other big ideas revealing the power of reading fiction.
S1 E122 · Fri, August 19, 2022
Who is Bill Gross? Who is the guy who learned to take risks in college while scalping basketball tickets at Duke? Or who was the risk-taker who counted cards in Las Vegas? Who exactly is the man once named the Morningstar Investment Manager of the Decade? And how was this lifelong investment professional able to see around corners during one of the country's greatest financial meltdowns during a time of bailouts and bank failures? You may already know Mary Childs as a co-host at NPR's Planet Money, and she's also the author of The Bond King , the person answers each of these questions.
S1 E121 · Fri, August 12, 2022
One of my favorite CFOs is Bob Lung. For the past 33 years, he's been chauffeuring players and dignitaries at the NFL's annual Hall of Fame weekend activities in Canton, Ohio. In this fast-paced interview, we talk about Bob's favorite moments at the Hall of Fame ceremony, what it means to be a driver during this event, and a couple of special stories. Should every business consider having its own hall of fame? We address that question along with the role of mentoring relationships in becoming a star in any field.
S1 E120 · Fri, August 12, 2022
With the passing of the 20th anniversary of WorldCom filing bankruptcy in the aftermath of the whistle being blown on its reporting of fraudulent financial statements, I wanted to revisit Cynthia Cooper's page-turner, Extraordinary Circumstances . Why was the fraud committed? How? What was internal audit's role in detecting the fraudulent entries created by the CFO and four members of his staff? In this episode, Aaron Beam helps me to answer these questions as he draws on his experience in the financial statement fraud at HealthSouth. Aaron is an author and sought-after public speaker at major universities around the country.
S1 E119 · Fri, August 05, 2022
What is the best book on negotiation you've ever read? Many business readers who have read Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss would probably pick that title. What if I said there is another title that's far more practical, ideas that you can put into practice right now? That book is Negotiation Simplified by Jim Reiman. In this fast-paced conversation, we talk about the core four concepts of negotiating, the best discussion I've ever read about goals in the context of negotiating, and the 3 classes of people we have to consider in any negotiating process, Also, we hit on how to deal with bullies in the negotiating process.
S1 E118 · Fri, July 29, 2022
The legendary Bill Campbell is called the trillion dollar coach by his biographers. Campbell coached and mentored larger-than-life business leaders Larry Page, Eric Schmidt, Steve Jobs, Marissa Mayer, and many others. If Bill was the trillion dollar coach, then I'm not sure what to call Joe Ehrmann and his friend and fellow coach, Biff Poggi who are central pillars in the book Season of Life by Jeffrey Marx. Little did Jeffrey Marx know that his life would be transformed forever once he stepped on a Baltimore Colts football field during training camp as an eleven-year-old. Years later, he would reconnect with Joe Ehrmann who took him under his wing during those earlier years. What was supposed to be a newspaper article about the demolition of a football field turned into a book about the building up of young men not just in football, but in the bigger game of life. Season of Life is one of the best books I've read in years. Central themes include false masculinity, revolving integrity, the best definitions of coach and success, and a young football player's reflection on a huddle.
S1 E117 · Fri, July 22, 2022
Can you name any recent descendants of Cornelius Vanderbilt who didn't build one but two massive fortunes during the Gilded Age? After the third and fourth generations, the money started evaporating quickly, but why? Katherine Howe is the co-author of Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty . During this conversation, we explore some of the fascinating stories she uncovered with her co-author, Anderson Cooper that spans six generations of the Vanderbilt family.
S1 E116 · Sat, July 16, 2022
Rob Hart's book, The Warehouse , is a speculative dystopian thriller. The central character is an online retailer called Cloud - think Amazon in the distant future dominating its rivals which has devastating effects on small retailers across the country. Cloud's founder is dying of cancer, so he's on a farewell tour visiting all of the company's distribution centers. Is he a hero or is he delusional? Two other characters find out how far Cloud will go to make the world a better place, but for whom? Paxton starts his employment at the very place that robbed him of everything. What's his story? And Zinnia seems like she's a better fit for a CIA operative, not a warehouse order picker. What's up her sleeve? Rob is the first fiction writer to be interviewed on CFO Bookshelf.
S1 E115 · Sat, July 09, 2022
We learn from Atticus in To Kill a Mockingbird , "You never really understand a person until you consider things from their point of view … until you climb into their skin and walk around in it." Elvis Pressley used to sing, "Before you abuse, criticize and accuse, walk a mile in my shoes." What may seem so apparent to many is not to others. In this conversation, we unpack the big ideas and linkages between business success and customer empathy with Dr. Natalie Petouhoff, the co-author of Empathy in Action.
S1 E114 · Fri, July 01, 2022
Jeff Sands is the author of Corporate Turnaround Artistry . Before fixing and mending other companies' broken income statements and balance sheets, he had to fix his own. During this conversation, we also learn about the debt stacks, myths of bankruptcies, the five stages of a turnaround, the three types of turnaround CEOs, and what Jeff calls the salvation process.
S1 E113 · Fri, June 24, 2022
If you think Netflix was the cause of Blockbuster's failure, you'll change your mind after you hear Alan Payne explain the reasons for this company's demise. Alan was a longtime owner of a chain of successful Blockbuster stores. He was also featured in the Netflix 2020 documentary, The Last Blockbuster . Alan's new book is Built to Fail , and we learn four reasons for Blockbuster's eventual bankruptcy which started with poor leadership at the CEO level.
S1 E112 · Mon, June 20, 2022
If I could only pick one book for any financial leader to read about company culture, it would be Patty McCord's book, Powerful . In this episode, two CFOs break down the big ideas in Patty's book which include the role of the culture-centric HR professional, making decisions on facts vs. data, annual performance reviews, variable pay, learning every aspect of a business, and teams vs. families.
S1 E111 · Sat, June 11, 2022
Have you ever worked with a software vendor who said their solution would save you as much as $1 million annually? Or how about the big data warehousing project where the lead consultant says this project could lead to significantly more revenues? When you accept projects with these types of claims, have you gone back one year later to find out the actual cost savings you thought realized? Our topic on this show is the book entitled, Project Profitability by our guest, Reginald Lee. We explore project salience, mental models for project prioritization, and informational and instructional-centric projects.
S1 E110 · Sat, June 04, 2022
Glenn Hopper is the author of Deep Finance: Corporate Finance for the Information Age . Glenn is a likable expert who helps the rest of us better understand artificial intelligence, data science, and ERP solutions. As a hands-on, self-taught digital expert, his writing is still easy to understand. In this conversation, some of the big ideas we cover are the differences between machine and deep learning, practical applications of data science in smaller businesses, and comparing comprehensive ERP solutions with best-of-breed tools that are stacked together.
S1 E109 · Sat, May 28, 2022
For too many years than I can count, I've been listening to the audio version of How to Become a CEO by Jeffrey Fox annually. The book is a simple, to-the-point book discussion that applies to any position, even an officer in the military. In this conversation, we hear about admitting fault, damaging emails, mastering one big new thing every year, the power and impact of handwritten notes, and a few classic books.
S1 E108 · Fri, May 20, 2022
Professor Jim Shein of the Kellogg School of Management is one of my favorite turnaround experts, and he's the author of my favorite book in this space, Reversing the Slide . Some of the big ideas we address are how to get started in this field of work, the role of strategy in turnarounds, the 13-week cash flow forecast, and a handful of case studies. We also learn who is best suited for this type of work, CEOs or CFOs.
S1 E107 · Sat, May 14, 2022
Financial writers have been telling CFOs that they need to become storytellers in their businesses. How? John Pollack is a former presidential speechwriter and he's an expert in analogies. He's delivered a popular TEDx presentation on the topic and this book Shortcut takes a deep dive into the anatomy of this powerful tool to sell our ideas. In this interview, we hear examples of good analogies, how they shape the legal system, and how baseball impacted a California law leading to unintended consequences. Accordingly, John's message becomes a solid bridge for financial leaders becoming better storytellers.
S1 E106 · Fri, May 06, 2022
I'm going to make the bold statement that Roger Martin is this era's Peter Drucker as a prolific business writer. Roger has co-authored my favorite book on strategy, Playing to Win which is simple, concise, pragmatic, and has plenty of sticky concepts. Roger's newest book is A New Way to Think . If you like Adam Grant, Dan Pink, the Heath brothers, or Matthew May, this book belongs in your book queue, the topic in this conversation.
S1 E105 · Sat, April 30, 2022
Finding, obtaining, and developing leadership talent is not easy, and there is plenty of data to support making decisions too fast or waiting too long in getting the right team in place. Ram Charan is known for books like Execution, Boards That Deliver, and What the CEO Wants You to Know. He's also the co-author of Talent: The Market Cap Multiplier. In this conversation, we talk about the talent bank, the one-to-one conversations, cutting bait fast, and two of his favorite books.
S1 E104 · Fri, April 22, 2022
Ben Lamorte is making his third appearance on CFO Bookshelf. He certifies OKRs coaches on his platform, OKRs.com. His newest book is The OKRs Field Book . In this conversation, we address outcomes vs outputs, setting meaningful objectives through a five-step process, and OKRs vs KPIs.
S1 E103 · Sat, April 16, 2022
If you ask ten successful CEOs what they do, you'll probably hear many answers--all good, but vastly different from executive to executive. A dream team of McKinsey partners decided to research the very question based on 200 in-depth interviews and surveys with successful CEOs. Their findings are found in the new book, CEO Excellence: The Six Mindsets That Distinguish the Best Leaders from the Rest . In this conversation, we hear from one of the co-authors, Carolyn Dewar as she talks about s-curves, the kitchen cabinet, defining roles vs. the right people, the 40-30-20-10 Brad Smith rule, and much more.
S1 E102 · Fri, April 08, 2022
If you've been searching for the PayPal version of Brad Stone's, The Everything Store , then you can start with Jimmy Soni's new book, The Founders . In this fast-paced interview with the author, we learn many smaller stories behind the bigger ones of PayPal's big obstacles it faced before its IPO: the lack of innovation at the big banks Reid Hoffman's role in what PayPal is today The combination of X.com and Confinity Peter Thiel, the reluctant CEO and the Elon Musk Palace Coupe Security - from innocence to frustration to superiority The love-hate relationship between PayPal and eBay Finally, we hit the bookends hard--the three-hour conversation with Elon Musk and the moving and inspiring epilogue.
S1 E101 · Fri, April 01, 2022
As we observe the DNA behind some of our favorite CEOs, patterns will start to surface. Some are natural at scaling companies to new levels. And then there are stories like those of Phil Knight, Jeff Bezos, Reid Hoffman, and Sara Blakely who started with a kernel of an idea and went on to launch brands that are household names. Bob Jordan is the co-author of Right Leader, Right Time , a book that reveals a framework listing four natural instincts of impactful leaders - Fixers, Artists, Builders, and Strategists. In this episode, we unpack the FABS framework and how to make the most of it.
S1 E100 · Sat, March 26, 2022
Joe Coulombe is one of the most intelligent, creative, and thoughtful CEOs I've read about in the past ten to twenty years. He grew Trader Joe's into one of the most successful and iconic brands in the grocery industry before he sold the business in 1979. Patty Civalleri is the co-author of Becoming Trader Joe and was a dear friend of this gifted entrepreneur. In this episode, we touch on his compensation philosophy, creative marketing strategies, the books he read, product knowledge, and saying no to the big brands.
S1 E99 · Sat, March 19, 2022
Dan Montgomery is the founder of Agile Strategies, a boutique OKRs firm, and the author of Start Less Finish More . Dan states the old strategic planning model of predicting and then controlling needs to give way to sensing and responding, and he calls that agile strategy. In this conversation, he hit on many fascinating concepts: limitations of The Balanced Scorecard executing vs formulating strategy the retreat to cozy mental models the fit between OKRs and agile strategy multicausal systems minimal viable strategies STEEP framework Platonic values Cynefin framework
S1 E98 · Sat, March 12, 2022
Good luck on finding a book about phantom stock plans that's simple to understand with practical examples. It does not exist. However, Paolo Pasicolan has created nearly a hundred such plans with the law firm he works for, Miles and Stockbridge. Paulo's explanation of phantom stock plans is clear, concise, and complete.
S1 E97 · Sat, March 05, 2022
I've always been intrigued about the roles of business psychologists and certified business coaches and their ability to elevate the performances of the people and businesses they work with. In this show, I visited with Dr. Russell Thackeray, a business psychologist, certified coach, trainer, and renowned speaker. We addressed topics such as resistance, when to hire a business coach, the intentions and execution of tough love, psychological capacity, and much more.
S1 E96 · Sat, February 26, 2022
I first heard Captain Charlie Plumb's POW story some twenty years ago, and I'm thrilled to share this conversation where we talk about Louis Zamperini, an unlikely parachute dialogue, culture, the leadership of Admiral James Stockdale, and some astounding research regarding PTSD of the men held at the Hanoi Hilton.
S1 E95 · Sat, February 19, 2022
If you do an Amazon search on KPIs, the top result will be KPI Checklists by Bernie Smith. Bernie's newest book is entitled Gamed , our topic for this discussion. We'll find out why so many smart and creative people have a hard time agreeing on KPIs, what black hat testing is for incentives, and the KPI framework named ROKET-DS.
S1 E94 · Sat, February 12, 2022
One of the rock stars of financial modeling is one of the founders and the Executive Director of the Financial Modeling Institute, Ian Schnoor. In this episode, we talk about the multi-disciplinary requirements of financial modeling, the planning process, component vs systems thinking, and other big ideas around this critical business skill.
S1 E93 · Sun, February 06, 2022
My four favorite authors on performance measure with improvement as the primary aim is Don Wheeler, Stacey Barr, Dean Spitzer, and Mark Graban. In this conversation, we find out three of the most important questions surrounding performance improvement the right. Our guest is Mark Graban, and he's the author of Measures of Success, our topic for this episode.
S1 E92 · Sat, January 29, 2022
Have you ever worked for a psychopathic CEO? If not, odds are that you will at least once in your career. That's according to the founder and president of the CFO Leadership Council, Jack McCullough. Jack's newest book is, The Psychopathic CEO , and we'll hear more about who they are, how they make their way into a company, and what to do should you work for one.
S1 E91 · Sat, January 22, 2022
Every current and past senior executive at Amazon will say their leadership principles are behind every groundbreaking innovation. Every student of business knows about Amazon's obsession with its customers. But that's only one of the leadership principles. In this episode, John Rossman, the author of The Amazon Way delivers some of the big ideas and concepts baked into these inspiring, yet challenging leadership principles.
S1 E90 · Sat, January 22, 2022
In 2021, CFO Bookshelf published 51 episodes. In this show, we reveal the top ten that were the most downloaded across various podcast channels. We'll also share the producer's picks which comprise authors who are considered thought leaders in their fields across the globe.
S1 E89 · Sat, January 15, 2022
CFO Bookshelf loves The Soul of Enterprise weekly podcast hosted by Ed Kless and Ron Baker. In this conversation, we go behind the scenes with Ed Kless on how the show was created, how they prep for each weekly live show, and some of their favorite guests.
S1 E88 · Sat, January 08, 2022
Oscar Wallace is my second-favorite accountant in the movies, and you may remember him from The Untouchables . Tiffany Couch and Oscar share one thing in common--they both use the science of numbers to find theft and wrongdoing. Tiffany is a long-time forensic accountant, and she's the author of, The Thief in Your Company .
S1 E87 · Fri, December 31, 2021
We read 109 books in 2021, and in this episode, we'll share our Top 10 along with some bonus selections. Find out three of the top CEOs ever in American business. Learn why start-up founders have lonely jobs. What is the best book ever written on finance? The answers are found in this very special episode.
S1 E86 · Sat, December 18, 2021
While you may not recognize the name, Steve Bailey is one of three people I would enshrine immediately into a financial modeling hall of fame if one existed. Steve is a long-time financial modeling expert and he's the founder of Model Metrix, a firm providing modeling-as-a-service and integrated business planning design work.
S1 E85 · Sat, December 11, 2021
When you think of agile you probably think of software development. How about for M&A activities? Kison Patel is the author of Agile M&A and M&A Tactics . He's also the founder and CEO of DealRoom. In this show, we talk about the mindset, methods, and technology of agile M&A.
S1 E84 · Sat, December 04, 2021
Whether you love the Beatles, are a casual fan, or don't care for them, the first thought that probably pops from your mind when you hear this group's name is a famous band and one where you know all the members - Paul, John, George, and Ringo. Here's assuming you never think of the terms economics, entrepreneurship, human capital, innovation, venture capital, and management. In this show, we hear from Sam Staley as he talks about the big ideas from his book, The Beatles and Economics.
S1 E83 · Sat, November 27, 2021
Bolanle (Bola) Williams-Olley took a circuitous route to her CFO position and also received much help along the way. Now she's doing what she can to help others in becoming the best version of themselves. Bola is also the author of Build Boldy where she tells the story of starting her accounting career with a math background in the architectural industry. Today, she is the CFO for the architectural design firm, Mancini Duffy where she is also a part-owner.
S1 E82 · Sat, November 20, 2021
There are millions of obscure names of the men and women behind every label of the food we buy at our local grocery stores. While some of these stories are sad and despairing, others are inspiring. Benjamin Loor lifts humanity through this special book, The Secret Life of Groceries . In this episode, we hear about three of the people Ben wrote about in this book that's part entrepreneurialism and part social sciences.
S1 E81 · Fri, November 12, 2021
My favorite books are narrative non-fiction which can inform, inspire, and entertain. When the book possesses all of these traits, we have a special book. And that's what we have with Mark Paul's book, The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told. At times, the book reads like fiction, but it's not. The book includes an NFL owner who wanted to swap his Chargers for horses, a horse trainer who acted like a CFO, a horse racing track tied to a drug cartel, and a horse named, Winning Colors.
S1 E80 · Fri, November 05, 2021
I've been a Patrick Lencioni fan for years. His last book is The Motive and it was released during COVID. Is it his best book? Why did he write it? Where does it fit with his other great books? Brian Jones is a friend of Lencioni and one of the consultants for the author's Table Group consulting arm. Brian provides a great perspective to these questions and more.
S1 E79 · Sat, October 30, 2021
Before Moneyball, we had Finley Ball. While Finley ball lacked the analytics brought to us by Moneyball in the same baseball city of Oakland, California, Finley Ball was about color, magical moments at the ballpark, and improving the product for the fan while still producing a winning product on the field. Our guest is the niece of Charlie Finley who owned the Oakland A's. Nancy Finley's book is appropriately entitled Finley Ball .
S1 E78 · Fri, October 22, 2021
If you are looking for a clear and concise explanation of ESOPs, then you'll enjoy listening to Jess Helvick of First International Bank and Trust. Jess is an ESOP expert who explains these benefit plans simply and with impact. During this conversation, we address the what, why and who of ESOPs. We examine three commonly-held myths surrounding ESOPs. We also look at the before, during, and after implementation activities of ESOPs.
S1 E77 · Sat, October 16, 2021
Is Atomic Habits by James Clear overrated? And, is Atomic Habits worth reading? I’ve asked my friend and fellow CFO, Bruce Reed of PracticeLink to go all bookclub in this discussion. We answer these questions and hit our favorite big ideas in the book.
S1 E76 · Sat, October 09, 2021
Dealing or coping with change is one of the most difficult challenges for any financial leader to come to grips with - either for themselves or those they lead, mentor, or coach. Rick Maurer is the author of Beyond the Wall of Resistance which includes important constructs like the three levels of resistance and the change cycle. During this conversation, Rick provides advice and guidance on how to address change in the workplace
S1 E75 · Sat, October 02, 2021
Shannon Susko might be the most energetic business consultant I've ever met thanks to her infectious enthusiasm and deep understanding of how to scale a business toward achievable and positive results. Shannon has successfully started and sold two businesses and now runs a consulting firm that includes a pillar framework called 3HAG Way which is the topic of this discussion.
S1 E74 · Sat, September 25, 2021
If you liked the book, Barbarians at the Gate , then you'll like The Ceasars Palace Coup . Max Frumes is one of the co-authors of the book, and we learn more about what went wrong when the investors levered Harrah's with nearly $27 billion in debt when they took the gaming business private.
S1 E73 · Sat, September 18, 2021
Probably everything you know about setting goals and how to achieve them rests on the research of Dr. Edwin Locke and Gary Latham in the 1980s. Dr. Edwin Locke is also the author of the underrated book The Prime Movers which is as good if not better than Good to Great . In this show, we talk about Dr. Locke's pioneering research on the theory of goal setting along with the men and women who are wealth creators.
S1 E72 · Sat, September 11, 2021
While intellectual capital is nearly impossible to value, it clearly counts in the process of building wealth. Ron Baker is the author of Mind Over Matter which is an exploration of where wealth comes from and its three pillars of capital - human, structural, and social. As Ron would say, there's nothing more pragmatic than a good theory. That's why we'll come away from this conversation with so many actionable ideas.
S1 E71 · Sat, September 04, 2021
Gary Harpst is one of the co-founders of Solomon Software which was ultimately acquired by Great Plains. After that divestiture, Gary did a deep dive into what drove success in small businesses. The research resulted in two books on strategy and execution, and a consulting framework called Six Disciplines. Gary is the author of two books: Six Disciplines for Excellence and Six Disciplines Execution Revolution.
S1 E70 · Sat, August 28, 2021
Are we to celebrate startups that fail or fail fast? What if you are the founder of one of those startups? How do you deal with that failure? Mark Jacobsen attacks that topic head-on in his book, Eating Glass , an honest manuscript about his inner journey through failure and renewal.
S1 E69 · Tue, August 24, 2021
One of my favorite parts of The Education of a Value Investor is when Guy Spier talks about his lunch with Warren Buffett. Similar to the Buffett lunch, what if I could have a virtual dinner with this incredible and deep-thinking business author and money manager? The end result was a satisfying conversation rich with investing, business, and economic insights.
S1 E68 · Sat, August 21, 2021
In the world of value investing, Guy Spier never needs an introduction. I believe his book, The Education of a Value Investor is one of the Top 5 investing books ever written in the past 25 years. While we hit many high points in Guy's book, we do a lightning round of topics where Guy over-delivers with mindful and thorough responses.
S1 E67 · Sat, August 14, 2021
Steve Wexler is one of my favorite teachers in the data visualization space because he's easy to understand and doesn't speak over our heads. He's the co-author of The Big Book of Dashboards , and his newest book is The Big Picture . Our topics include preattentive attributes, the love affair with stoplight colors, dead-end dashboards, and important tips when building visualizations.
S1 E66 · Sat, August 07, 2021
I've met and talked to many CFOs around the country. We're rational, analytical, and can be direct at times. Some of us these CFOs are rare in that they have great people skills. But I'm not sure that's the case for the majority of financial leaders. Gilbert Eijkelenboom is the author of People Skills for Analytical Thinkers , our guest on this week's episode where we talk about the tools of gaining better communication skills.
S1 E65 · Sat, July 31, 2021
I was captivated by the website 2x3y.com months before the creative genius of that site released his book, Scale at Speed . The author is Felix Velarde, and his growth accelerator canvas is elegant, pragmatic, and impactful. If you like the writing of Verne Harnish, then you'll enjoy what Felix has to say about scaling at a rapid pace.
S1 E64 · Fri, July 23, 2021
CFO Bookshelf welcomed back CFO Dive's, Jane Thier to talk about the biggest headlines in 2021. We also talked about the stories we'll be reading about in the second half. Jane also told us the three CFOs she'd like to interview and the one company she's keeping an eye on.
S1 E63 · Sat, July 17, 2021
Guest host Shaefer Schuetz interviews Mark Gandy about the 60 books he's read or listened to during the first half of 2021. Mark shares his favorite five books and provides another half dozen or so books as honorable mentions.
S1 E62 · Sat, July 10, 2021
From serving a term as a Missouri Senator to serving a year in prison, Mr. Smith Goes to Prison was one of my favorite books in 2015. After watching College Behind Bars on Netflix this winter, I wanted to get Jeff Smith's input on how to reduce recidivism within the prison system. We also talked about the comparisons of an IVY League MBA with the entrepreneurial activities behind prison walls.
S1 E61 · Fri, July 02, 2021
Before taking the position as the IRS Commissioner, a reporter asked Charles Rossotti, "Were you ever in the military, and if you were, did you volunteer for a suicide mission?" Before running the IRS from 1997 to 2002, Rossotti was the co-founder, former chairman, and CEO of American Management Systems, Inc. In this episode, we look at what Charles did to help turn around that beleaguered agency.
S1 E60 · Sat, June 26, 2021
He's been called the grandfather of gamification. He's also the best-selling author of The Game of Work and Scorekeeping for Success . Behind his back, I'm calling Chuck Coonradt the owner, general manager, and MVP head coach of The Game of Work who is a Hall of Famer.
S1 E59 · Sat, June 19, 2021
You probably know about the best-selling book entitled American Icon which explains how an outsider turned around an ailing automotive company. But what set Alan Mulally apart from any other CEO? Why didn't he bring his Boeing managers to Ford with him? Is he as humble as we see him in the many interviews he conducts? Bryce Hoffman is the author of American Icon , and we learn more about this fascinating CEO along with his newest book about red team thinking.
S1 E58 · Sat, June 12, 2021
My favorite book about OKRs is Radical Focus by Christina Wodtke. Christina recently updated her book with a second edition which is the topic in this episode. We also talk about her dream job at Stanford University, why OKRs are not for every business, why some CEOs go wrong with OKRs, and why having a healthy culture is the starting point for implementing OKRs of any scale.
S1 E57 · Sat, June 05, 2021
Geraldine Carter is a consultant to small CPA firms around the country, and her message is niching down and burying the billable hour by implementing value pricing. Geraldine is also the host of the Smart Strategy for CPA's podcast. But her message is not unique for CPA firms - it's universal - all professional services firms can gain meaningful insights from Geraldine's expertise.
S1 E56 · Sat, May 29, 2021
While Simon Wardley is the creator of the visual strategy mapping construct called Wardley Mapping, I consider Ben Mosior one of the greatest teachers of this framework. In this show, we discuss how to get started with Wardley Mapping and the mindset to stick with it.
S1 E55 · Sat, May 29, 2021
The host of CFO Bookshelf bumped into Simon Wardley's writing on mapping strategy several years ago, and he couldn't put his content down. In this conversation, we talk about the strategy circle, the OODA loop, the 'why' of purpose, doctrine, and many other key concepts related to Wardley Mapping.
S1 E54 · Fri, May 21, 2021
Greg Graves is the former CEO of the employee-owned engineering firm, Burns & McDonnell. In this show, he talks about going 'all in' regarding ESOPs and his book Create Amazing .
S1 E53 · Sat, May 15, 2021
Brad Chase was the marketing mastermind behind one of the most successful software launches ever - Windows 95. He replicated this success while serving at Microsoft on several other high-profile projects. Brad is the author of Strategy First: How Businesses Win Big . In this episode, we discuss the big ideas in his book including the E-Strategy and simple formula that's simple, impactful, and memorable.
S1 E52 · Sat, May 08, 2021
Jack McCullough is the CFO of all CFOs. He's the founder and President of The CFO Leadership Council with a membership of more than 1,800 financial leaders. Jack is the author of Rock Star CFOs which lists 9 traits of a great CFO, our topic in this fascinating and insightful interview.
S1 E51 · Sun, May 02, 2021
Everybody Ought to Be Rich by David Farber is now one of my favorite books in the business history genre. It's the story of one of the greatest number 2 men of the modern business era, John Jakob Raskob - a name that every financial leader should know about.
S1 E50 · Sat, April 24, 2021
If I'm going to listen to a data science and analytics expert for nearly an hour, that person better speak a language that I can understand and who is relatable. That person does exist, and his name is Jon Daniels of Bamboo HR. In this episode, he talks about data lakes, data warehousing, ETL, and data governance. He also provides simple strategies to go from no intelligence to business and artificial intelligence.
S1 E49 · Sat, April 17, 2021
While this is CFO Bookshelf where we generally interview book authors, there's no way I want to read a book on ERP planning and implementations. I believe this is a better topic addresses through doing and listening to the sage advice of others. One such person is Ed Kless who is an expert in software implementations. He's also the co-host of my favorite podcast, The Soul of Enterprise. You can also hear him several times a week hosting the Sage Thought Leader Podcast. In this show, we'll hear Ed talk about what happens before, during, and after ERP implementations.
S1 E48 · Fri, April 09, 2021
As a financial leader, I enjoy any conversation with a CEO, especially one that's co-founded a business generating more than $100 million annually. Jeff Morrill is the co-founder with his brother of Planet Subaru based in Boston. His new book is Profit Wise, and we hit on many of the big ideas in that insightul read.
S1 E47 · Sat, April 03, 2021
Some of my favorite words in the CFO lexicon are momentum, acceleration, velocity, drive, and even thrust. Coincidentally, Mike Berland is the author of Maximum Momentum - How to Get It, How to Keep It . And it's those very words we focused on during our conversation. Mike is the founder of Decode_M, a research and analytics firm that decodes data into momentum for clients. In this episode, we talked about how businesses gain momentum, and how it can jumpstart our strategic initiatives.
S1 E46 · Fri, March 26, 2021
If you liked The Big Short by Michael Lewis where we learn about the financial meltdown of 2007-08, then you will probably like the stories behind the financial revolution that took place during the 10 years that followed. | Daniel Simon has weaved more than 150 interviews with technologists that he calls misfits | or financial hackers - the men and women who shaped Fintech after the global financial crisis. Daniel's book is entitled The Money Hackers. He writes about the personal stories behind electronic payments, debit cards, peer-to-peer lending cryptocurrencies, blockchain, and much more.
S1 E45 · Fri, March 19, 2021
The legendary CEO, Hunter Harrison, was making an impact with his tools and philosophies while turning around Canadian National Railway. But he still needed help with a serious problem. The organization's culture was still a problem. Judy Johnson was part of the consulting team who helped with CN's cultural turnaround. She and her co-authors of SwitchPoints talked about their journey and the tools and frameworks they applied during that project. SwitchPoints is by far the best book I've ever read on reviving the culture in any organization. The tools described in the book are practical and impactful. In this interview, Judy will talk about DCOM, the ABC framework on behaviors and consequences, 15 percenters, and much more.
S1 E44 · Sat, March 13, 2021
Adam Mead's new book, The Complete Financial History of Berkshire Hathaway was 5 years in the making and started out as a 5,000-page manuscript that was finally shaved to just under a thousand pages. Instead of this being a book about Warren Buffett, it's a complete history of every purchase made by Berkshire Hathaway since the beginning.
S1 E43 · Sat, March 06, 2021
One of the best accounting books I've ever read about Lean from a CFO's perspective is Real Numbers by Jean Cunningham, one of the authors of that book. But the audience for that book is CEOs, operating managers, and anyone working on the plant floor. The book is also relevant for health care and other service industry professionals. Real Numbers was written a decade ago, but listening to Jean who is so kind and generous reminds us that the lean message is still relevant, impactful, and real.
S1 E42 · Sun, February 28, 2021
Stacey Barr is the author of Practical Performance Measurement and Prove It! She is also the creator of the best performance measurement framework I've ever reviewed, and it's applicable to businesses and non-profits of all sizes. The thinking person's framework is called PuMP(R). In our interview with Stacey, we address why so many organizations fail at implementing performance measurements bringing sustainable change and improvement to the organization. We talk about tools, methodology, and the social side of measurement.
S1 E41 · Sat, February 20, 2021
Daniele Martins is the Head of Global FP&A at ThoughtWorks in Brazil. In this show, we talked about technology, processes, and people. We drilled into spreadsheets, budgeting, forecasting, and the 65% which makes for a great FP&A ideal team player.
S1 E40 · Sun, February 14, 2021
Did you realize the first book written on OKRs was Radical Focus by Christina Wodtke? She's our guest along with Ben Lamorte who joins us for his second appearance on the show. We talk about when and when to never use OKRs.
S1 E39 · Sun, February 07, 2021
When you think of iconic and successful CEOs, names like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Howard Schultz, Jack Welch, and Sam Walton probably spring to mind. Can you name a 4-time CEO who orchestrated overwhelming turnarounds at each of his stopping points? Hunter Harrison did, and he's the subject of the book, Railroader: The Unfiltered Genius and Controversy of Four-Time CEO Hunter Harrison . Our guest is the author of this biography, Howard Green. We talk about the CEO's childhood, the relationship with his father, 3 keys to his emerging success as a railroader, and much more.
S1 E38 · Sat, January 30, 2021
I'm a huge fan of the book, The Management Myth by Matthew Stewart. During our conversation, we talk about the business gurus, strategic planning, management consulting, philosophy, and what is a great manager.
S1 E37 · Sat, January 23, 2021
Lora Cecere needs no introduction, but she's a global thought leader on supply chain. She is the founder of Supply Chain Thought Leader and also writes for Forbes. She also publishes content on her website Supply Chain Shaman as well as on LinkedIn. Lora is the author of Supply Chain Metrics that Matter which was published in 2015. She is followed by more than 320,000 on LinkedIn, and her organization's Supply Chains to Admire is must-reading each year.
S1 E36 · Sat, January 16, 2021
There are only three books I recommend on the topic of performance measurement. By far, the best title is Transforming Performance Measurement by Dean Spitzer. While working for IBM, Dean realized that training was not the path to better and transformation performance. As he started learning the good and the bad of performance measurement, he learned what was needed for organizational transformation - something The Balanced Scorecard could never deliver. The Big Ideas Training alone does not improve organizational performance Changing the measurement system precedes organizational change The strongest quadrant in the balanced scorecard The 4 Critical Success Factors of Transformational Performance Measurement The dark side of measurement The 10-30-60 Rule The Chief Measurement Officer Exploratory vs confirmatory measurement Transactional vs Experience measurement The IPOO Model Profit-Sharing Plans and Performance Measurement
S1 E35 · Fri, January 08, 2021
Steve Cakebread's current CEO at Yext says he is the master of taking technology companies public. Steve published his first book in 2020 entitled The IPO Playbook, and we talk about what happens before, during, and after the IPO.
S1 E34 · Sun, December 27, 2020
CFO Dive's, Jane Thier joins CFO Bookshelf to discuss the top business stories of 2020. While COVID and PPP dominated the headlines, other stories and themes developed as well such as automation, pivoting to digital, and working from home.
S1 E33 · Sun, December 20, 2020
Tax CPA Jeff Shore gives us some last-minute tax insights for 2020 along with tax ramifications of a new administration in 2021. We also talk about PPP, timing expense deductions, tax credits, and expense classification. Don't worry - this is not boring at all. Jeff is quotable and easy to understand as he demystifies some complex tax topics.
S1 E32 · Sat, December 12, 2020
I'm a long-time reader of the great blog posts at Interworks.com. One of those writers is Dan Murray who is their Director of Strategic Innovation. I was so lucky in getting to meet Dan at a Quantrix conference a few years ago - that friendship has continued and led to this conversation about data extraction, ETL strategies, data infrastructure, and BI tools such as Tableau.
S1 E31 · Wed, December 09, 2020
I recently heard an S&OP podcaster ask if S&OP is dead, and so I wanted to ask one of the pioneers in this planning space if S&OP was still revelvant. Our guest is Bob Stahl, an S&OP pioneer, speaker, writer, and consultant. You'll enjoy his first answer to my question.
S1 E30 · Sun, December 06, 2020
I first learned about Doug Hall's insights on marketing and innovation when I read Jump Start Your Business Brain. His newest book is Driving Eureka. Doug is a pioneer in the field of innovation engineering and the founder of Eureka Ranch. He's our guest on this week's edition of CFO Bookshelf.
S1 E29 · Sat, November 28, 2020
Retired FBI agent and cybercrime expert and author Scott Augenbaum is back for this bonus episode. He gives us 5 shopping tips for the upcoming holiday to protect us against cybercriminal activity.
S1 E28 · Sat, November 28, 2020
This year, my email was hacked. I was lucky as nothing was stolen, just my time and patience. Once I got my email restored from Microsoft who made me feel like a criminal, I wanted to find an expert on cybercrime who specializes in cybersecurity. Not only did I find him, but I read his book and found him on LinkedIn. Within hours, I was able to schedule an interview with retired special agent Scott Augenbaum of the FBI.
S1 E27 · Sat, November 21, 2020
Bob Lung is a CPA and CFO who has a side gig that includes followers around the globe. Bob is an author, podcaster, and membership site owner in the realm of fantasy football. Bob tells us how he got his start in accounting and how he was introduced to fantasy football in the mid-80s. We also learn how his volunteer work at the NFL Hall of Fame each year in Canton, OH.
S1 E26 · Sun, November 15, 2020
Do you have an and? That is, what do you do outside of work? That's the topic we explore with John Garrett, a former PwC internal auditor in M&A who then became a stand-up comedian. Today, he's a public speaker and consultant with a specialty in improving business cultures. He's also the author of the book, What's Your And?
S1 E25 · Sat, November 14, 2020
Business coaching is a $15 billion industry, so CFO Bookshelf wants to know if executive coaching is overrated and over-prescribed. The no-name CFOs address those questions and more along with a very special guest who is relatively new to the industry.
S1 E24 · Sat, November 07, 2020
I had no idea that the GoVenture suite of online business simulations even existed. Millions of players have learned the basics of business along with strategy, marketing, sales, operations, finance, and accounting through weaving their way through these realistic simulations. Our guest is Mathew Georghiou, the CEO and founder of MediaSpark, the creator of the GoVenture games. We talk about the origin of the game and who the intended audience is. Looking for a fun way to learn business? This episode is for you.
S1 E23 · Fri, October 30, 2020
Startup expert Brett Fox is the author of Learn How to Take a Punch . In our interview, he discusses team building, culture, raising VC funds, when to scale and when not to and, product-market fit leading indicators.
S1 E22 · Sat, October 24, 2020
In the next four years, CEO, author, and private equity expert Adam Coffey will be creating $2 billion in new wealth for his investors through just 6 initiatives with only a small team while maintaining a great culture of 3,000 employees. Adam is also the author of The Private Equity Playbook .
S1 E21 · Sat, October 17, 2020
You've probably heard the term Open Book Management, but what if you could hear Board members of a successful company talk about this practice that's been used for nearly 10 years. In this episode, we talk with the founder and CEO of PFSbrands based in Missouri where topics include financial huddles. the book Keeping Score with Gritt, a strong company culture, core values, customer service, and the power of critical data made available to team members on a daily basis.
S1 E20 · Sun, October 11, 2020
We've been a long-time fan of Peter Lynch who has created the Excel-based, A Simple Model . Peter brings an uncanny ability to teach and elevate the skills of those wanting to build financial models through his growing platform.
S1 E19 · Tue, October 06, 2020
Professor Edward Hess is one of our all-time favorite business authors who has written 12 books. His newest is Hyper-Learning: How to Adapt to the Speed of Change. Ed states that hyper-learning is a high-quality effort that requires learning unlearning then relearning at the speed of change.
S1 E18 · Tue, September 29, 2020
What job did you have when you were 20 years old? Imagine starting a complex sales position during one of the most challenging economic environments our country has ever experienced. Yet, 20-year-old Alex Dickinson overcame overwhelming odds that he would not succeed in his father's company.
S1 E17 · Sat, September 19, 2020
If you were asked to cook the books, would you? That's the situation Aaron Beam found himself in when his CEO told him to fix the numbers to appease Wall Street investors. Aaron is the author of HealthSouth: The Wagon to Disaster. Aaron joins us to talk about his role in the fraud, ethics, intimidating CEOs, and so much more.
S1 E16 · Sat, September 12, 2020
Paul Downs is the author of the highly-popular book, Boss Life, and is a former guest columnist of The New York Times. Paul in this insightful interview talks about the ups and downs in running a small business and getting the help he needed to stay on track and even begin to thrive.
S1 E15 · Sat, September 05, 2020
The co-hosts of The CFO Bookshelf Podcast have been fans of Ron Baker for years, and our favorite podcast is one that he co-hosts with Ed Kless, The Soul of Enterprise. Ron is a recovering CPA who is probably the father of value pricing for professional services firms. We talked about pricing at length plus many other of Ron's favorite topics.
S1 E14 · Mon, August 31, 2020
Dave Kellogg is the former CEO of Host Analytics now called Planful. Dave is a brilliant writer on his blog called Kellblog and he's outstanding behind a mic too. Since leaving his CEO post, Dave has been consulting SaaS-based businesses in Silicon Valley, and we hit on many of the topics that are near and dear to him.
S1 E19 · Sat, August 15, 2020
Bruce is able to coax the coolest podcasters in the HR space with some bourbon to join the show to talk about COVID, employee engagement, privacy issues surrounding technology and numerous other topics in this colorful discussion.
S1 E13 · Sat, August 15, 2020
Maybe the name John Boyd does not ring a bell, but perhaps the OODA Loop will, the mental model created by one of the most gifted military strategists since Sun Tzu. I was so mesmerized by Robert Coram's biography on John Boyd, I reached out to the author to talk about his book.
S1 E12 · Sun, July 26, 2020
After reading two of Dan's books, The Read Rose Crew and Kelly, CFO Bookshelf jumped at the chance to interview the author, Dan Boyne. Dan shares how he got started in rowing, what he does now as a coaching instructor at Harvard, and the two aforementioned books.
S1 E11 · Sun, July 12, 2020
Many business students and most strategic analysts are familiar with Porter's Five Forces competitive framework. Katherine Gehl is a former CEO and was frustrated with the lack of innovation and competition she was noticing in our two-party political system. After successfully publishing a white paper on the issue and a solution with Michael Porter a few years ago, she recently released her first book with her research partner entitled The Political Industry . Katherine is our guest on this installment of CFO Bookshelf.
S1 E10 · Sat, June 06, 2020
Last week, we heard from the President of Kolbe Corporation, Amy Bruske. We enjoyed that conversation so much, we decided to unpack much of what she had to say on conative strengths. Mark and Bruce addressed the relevance of Kolbe in the business and smaller work teams and that this is an assessment that will have a major impact on your life personally and professionally.
S1 E9 · Sun, May 31, 2020
Amy Bruske is the president of Kolbe Corp. She is also the co-author of Business is Business with her step-mother, Kathy Kolbe. Amy discusses a number of topics on the show including an overview of conative instincts, her book, and why teams get stuck.
S1 E8 · Sat, May 23, 2020
CFO Bookshelf is impressed with the Canadian software company called Dryrun which specializes in cash flow forecasting. The co-founder of the company, Blain Bertsch joins us to talk about his company, the software, and cash flow modeling in general.
S1 E7 · Mon, May 18, 2020
You probably know her for the best-selling book, Multipliers . But Liz Wiseman is also the author of one of CFO Bookshelf's favorite books on A-Players entitled Rookie Smarts . Liz tells us the difference between having a rookie and a veteran mindset.
S1 E6 · Sun, May 10, 2020
Bruce and I enjoyed our conversation so much last week with OKR expert, Ben Lamorte, we wanted to unpack that discussion by sharing our own observations. Key themes include: starting small is it flavor-of-the-month? teams vs. individuals the OKR cycle is the OKR process only short-term thinking? grading the OKR process each quarter moving the needle
S1 E5 · Sun, May 03, 2020
Ben Lamorte is one of the top experts and consultants on implementing OKRs around the globe. He's an author and the President of OKRs.com. In this episode, Ben explains how Jeff Walker, his mentor and former CFO of Oracle, introduced the OKRs concept to Ben. Ben goes on to explain that OKRs are simple to implement, but hurdles and barriers can surface near the beginning of an implementation -- he explains his process in getting team buy-in.
S1 E4 · Sun, April 26, 2020
Brian Jones joins the 2 CFOs at CFO Bookshelf to talk about organizational health and the benefits to the company as a whole.
S1 E8 · Sun, April 19, 2020
Every person around the globe has been impacted directly or indirectly by the pandemic that's swept nation after nation. One of the CFOs reflects on what's been weighing on his mind during the past 4-6 weeks - always be learning, navigating in uncertain times, and never forgetting who you are. The 2 CFOs also read a booklist from one of the consultants of The Table Group.
S1 E7 · Sat, April 11, 2020
Many banks around the U.S. have funded small businesses with the SBA's PPP loan which was provided by the CARES Act. Will that funding be enough to keep these businesses afloat? Will more debt financing be required? More than ever, small business owners need to be reminded of the loan packaging process that can lead to favorable decisions by their lenders. In this show, Mark talks about his CRAWL process for obtaining bank financing.
S1 E6 · Sun, April 05, 2020
The 2 CFOs go off on a rant over the newly-created SBA funding package for small businesses called the Payroll Protection Program. While the loan can be forgivable, is it the right option? And are small businesses getting the best advice on how to pick a possibly better option?
S1 E5 · Sat, March 28, 2020
Mark and Bruce welcome insurance expert, Jake Taylor of Missouri-based Winter-Dent to discuss business interruption insurance in the wake of thousands of business closings during COVID-19. Jake provides insights as to what is covered and what may not be. He also provides practical advice on when to start the claims process.
S1 E4 · Sat, March 21, 2020
To say it's been a rough week would an understatement. Mark and Bruce do their best to bring words of encouragement during uncertain times. They also revisit the Stockdale Paradox mentioned by Jim Collins in Good to Great.
S1 E3 · Sat, March 14, 2020
In the wake of the current pandemic, is it time to revisit scenario planning? In this episode, Mark and Bruce discuss three keys to successful scenario planning along with a McKinsey briefing on three actions all businesses should be undertaking.
S1 E2 · Mon, March 09, 2020
She worked with a man who worked for both Thomas Waston Sr. and Jr. She spent another 10 years working with W. Edwards Deming. Oh, did we mention she's a friend of Verne Harnish?
S1 E1 · Sun, March 01, 2020
This week's CFO bookmarks include an introduction to an entrepreneur who worked with Dr. Deming and the founder of the IBM Executive School. Other bookmarks include mentions of Welcome to Management, The Experience Economy, and Data Sanity.
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