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Unleashing Your Remarkable Potential
Issue 2.34 - August 22, 2005 - ISSN: 1551-6571


In Kevin's Own Words

How and Why to Start a Business Book Club

Book clubs have been quite a rage over the last few years. Fueled in part by Oprah and others, the concept of reading a book then gathering with others who have read the same book has become “cool” again.

The reasons people have found them valuable include:

  • a great way to have meaningful conversation.
  • a way to support your own reading habit (I need to have the book read before the meeting!).
  • a way to form a community – to have a great reason to gather with other people to bond.
  • a way to learn something in a fun way.

Mark your Calendar

Upcoming Teleseminars

Sept. 15th: The Leader as a Coach

Oct. 13th: Goal Setting for Leaders

Nov. 17th: Mastering Your Leadership Traits with Bob Burg

Dec 8th: Leading with Accountability

It is for all of those same reasons and more that I suggest and encourage business book clubs. Maybe you would like to start one within your organization or maybe you would prefer to build one among colleagues from outside of work. Either way this article will outline the keys to help you build a successful single event or long-term club.

1. Market the idea. Once you are excited about this concept, use your influence and knowledge of your target group to market the concept to them. Even if your goal is to build a long-term “club.” Don’t market it that way – that requires too big of a commitment for many people. You are trying to encourage people to try something new that will requires their time both to read and participate. Rather than inviting them to make a long-term commitment, encourage them to read one book, then once they see the fun and the value, you will have them hooked.

2. Gain commitment. Once you have sold people on the idea make sure you gain a commitment to participate. People are really committing to two things: reading the book, and coming to the “meeting.” After all, if no one comes to the meeting, (or comes without having read much of the book) you won’t have much of a conversation!

3. Start small. Identify the number of people you will feel good about having involved. Experience shows that if you have 4-5 highly committed people you will have a successful experience. More is fine too, but you don’t have to have everyone in the organization or every person at a certain level participating for it to be successful.

4. Start easy. Not everyone is an avid reader. So pick a book that will be an easy sell in terms of topic and length. Picking the new 450-page book you are interested in might not be the best place to start. Remember that the value of the book club experience is more than just the book you read, but the conversations and ideas they stimulate.

5. Make it fun. This is a part of your marketing effort. Have food. Decorate the room, reminder invitations, etc. in a theme suggested by the book. Make the event itself something that will both encourage people to attend and create a buzz so other people want to attend the next one.

6. Have a facilitator. Someone needs to be responsible for facilitating the conversation. Beyond the normal facilitator roles of keeping others participating that person needs to have a few questions prepared that are designed to stimulate conversation.

7. Facilitate lightly. The facilitator should facilitate but not lead. Remember that you are after input, participation and having people involved in the conversation. Don’t let it become a lecture.

8. Keep the group involved. Beyond the group’s involvement in the conversation itself, get everyone’s input into future meeting times, setups, facilitators, and perhaps most of all, books. When people feel involved, they will be more invested in the success of the next event, and beyond.

I have helped organizations think through how to start these groups and have facilitated these discussions. While we have talked about the benefits that can be gained by individuals who participate in these groups, the organizational benefits can be huge as well. For the investment in a book for each person, organizations can create powerful conversation, deep professional development and better relationships.

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If you would like further help in setting up and/or facilitating business book clubs contact us at info@KevinEikenberrry.com.

Yours in Learning,


Kevin's Recommends

Two More Blogs I Read

Blogs. They are one of the hottest trends online and have become a major source of information and opinion for many people. In an issue in February I recommended two of the blogs that I read.

When I wrote that recommendation, many people didn’t know what a blog was or what I was talking about. Perhaps because you have seen mention of my blog here regularly on the right side of this newsletter or because of the explosive growth of this medium, you are now aware of what blogs are. Let me share with you recommendations for two more that I read regularly.

The Occupational Adventure

Curt Rosengren writes this blog that he calls “An ever-unfolding mixed bag of nuts, loosely clustered around the central theme of Occupational Adventure - that is, a career that lights your fire.” Curt writes extremely well and always provides me with food for thought. Probably once a month something he has written or referenced aids me in a conversation that I am having with a Client or colleague.

Talking Story

Rosa Say, the author of this blog started a bit over a year ago to support her book, Managing with Aloha. It is creatively written and always interesting. Rosa has a caring spirit that comes through in her writing that is both captivating and instructive. This is also fast becoming a hub for bloggers who write about things that will matter to you as a reader of Unleashing Your Remarkable Potential. Consider this one of the first places to go to find other excellent blogs (as a point of disclosure, I am one of the people she points to regularly!)

A Final Word

Anyone with a web browser can go to these or any other blog site and read the latest entries anytime. If you want to stay on top of what your favorite bloggers are writing, you need to subscribe to their feeds. There are many tools (some free) to allow you to do this easily. I use Pluck. Click HERE to read a longer list of options. You can learn more about how this works and how to get it to work for you HERE.


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