HackerNews Readings
40,000 HackerNews book recommendations identified using NLP and deep learning

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Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies

Reid Hoffman, Chris Yeh, et al.

4.5 on Amazon

7 HN comments

The Most Important Thing: Uncommon Sense for The Thoughtful Investor

Howard Marks, John FitzGibbon, et al.

4.6 on Amazon

7 HN comments

Getting Past No: Negotiating in Difficult Situations

William Ury

4.6 on Amazon

7 HN comments

Sell or Be Sold: How to Get Your Way in Business and in Life

Grant Cardone

4.7 on Amazon

7 HN comments

So You Want to Talk About Race

Ijeoma Oluo

4.7 on Amazon

6 HN comments

COVID-19: The Great Reset

Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret

3.7 on Amazon

6 HN comments

Great by Choice

Jim Collins, Morten T. Hansen, et al.

4.6 on Amazon

6 HN comments

Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism

Vladimir Ilich Lenin

4.8 on Amazon

6 HN comments

The Professional Chef

The Culinary Institute of America (CIA)

4.8 on Amazon

6 HN comments

Options as a Strategic Investment: Fifth Edition

Lawrence G. McMillan

4.7 on Amazon

6 HN comments

Trading: Technical Analysis Masterclass: Master the financial markets

Rolf Schlotmann and Moritz Czubatinski

4.5 on Amazon

5 HN comments

The Blueprint: 6 Practical Steps to Lift Your Leadership to New Heights

Douglas R. Conant

4.6 on Amazon

5 HN comments

Causal Inference: The Mixtape

Scott Cunningham

4.7 on Amazon

5 HN comments

Trillion Dollar Coach: The Leadership Playbook of Silicon Valley's Bill Campbell

Eric Schmidt, Jonathan Rosenberg, et al.

4.6 on Amazon

5 HN comments

No Rules Rules: Netflix and the Culture of Reinvention

Reed Hastings and Erin Meyer

4.6 on Amazon

5 HN comments

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earinoonFeb 6, 2019

I have a masters degree in Negotiation & Conflict Resolution. There's two books that give you negotiation superpowers:

1. Getting to Yes
2. Getting Past No

Those two books by themselves are enough to truly learn how to become an adept principled negotiator.

davidcrowonOct 30, 2012

I'd like to see "Getting to Yes" or "Getting Past No" in addition. I think both of these books are great at helping founders understand that negotiations are not zero-sum games.

jamesfordivonApr 11, 2013

Check out the good book "Getting Past No" (the follow-up to "Getting to Yes") - this is called having your BATNA - Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement and will help your position even if you don't have to bring it up, just having it in your mind could boost your confidence and help you ask for what you want

newman314onMar 7, 2013

My go to books for negotiating:

* Getting Past No

* Getting To Yes

occzonApr 10, 2021

I've read both a few of the negotiation books (Getting to yes, Getting past no) and Five Dysfunctions and I don't know that I'd recommend them, to be honest.

My beef with Five Dysfunctions is primarily the book recommending MBTI. MBTI has the predictive value of horoscopes, more or less. Really hard to take anything said seriously at that point.

The negotiation-series has some value, and has helped me succeed in some negotiations, but I'd honestly recommend Never split the difference as a substitute. Having read that book instead would probably have saved me more than a few poor outcomes in negotiations.

Finally I'd like to recommend Peopleware - surely one of - if not the definitively - best book I've read for professional purposes.

BeetleBonDec 4, 2020

Books I liked:

- Bargaining For Advantage (https://www.amazon.com/Bargaining-Advantage-Negotiation-Stra...)

- Negotiation Genius (https://www.amazon.com/Negotiation-Genius-Obstacles-Brillian...)

- Getting To Yes (https://www.amazon.com/Getting-Yes-Negotiating-Agreement-Wit...)

- The Coursera course from the University of Michigan (and not the Yale one).

- Getting Past No (https://www.amazon.com/Getting-Past-Negotiating-Difficult-Si...)

- Difficult Conversations/Crucial Conversations/Nonviolent Communications

The last bullet (arguably the last two bullets) are about conversation skills, but that is an essential part of negotiations.

I won't claim to be good at this stuff. It takes a lot of effort and practice to change habits you've formed your whole life. But still, I've improved somewhat. What I do think I've become much better at is identifying why someone's efforts succeeded (or in this case, failed).

I would also recommend Influence by Cialdini. It is not a negotiation book at all, but will make much of the material in those books more meaningful if you've read this book.

Books/courses I discourage:

- Never Split The Difference

- The Lynda course (there may be more than one now, but the one I took years ago was bad).

corysamaonAug 5, 2016

William Ury, of "Getting to Yes" fame, also has a book titled "The Power of a Positive No" that directly addresses your question. It should be required reading for all software developers. http://www.williamury.com/books/the-power-of-a-positive-no/

Really, if everyone on Earth read those two books and his "Getting Past No", the world would be a much happier place.

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