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The Tao of Motivation: Inspire Yourself and Others

By: Max Landsberg
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: HarperCollins Business
ISBN: 0006530958
ISBN-13: 9780006530954
Released: 29 May 2000
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A waste of time... - By: , 15 Jul 2005
This book is reallly poor!

The Tao of coaching (same author) is reallly great & I was expecting another interesting book. However this one feels like an empty shell with long & painful explanations of very simple & arguable concepts that are nothing more than persuading yourself you are already motivated. And you will need a lot of motivation to read the entire book!

The very few interesting ideas were already described (in a better way) in his previous book. My advise is that this book is not worth reading, & especiallly if you have already read his other book: the Tao of coaching.


Most Definitely Motivated - By: Adrian Vaughan, 23 Jul 2004
Fantastic book - it has certainly left me motivated.

Well written, concise & packed full of helpful tips & techniques that can be practiced, learned & easily implemented into your own daily life.

Whether for business or personal reasons - I recommend this book without hesitation.


Easy to read and apply - By: art@andipa.com, 12 Sep 2000
It's crazy that managers get no training in 'what makes people tick'. In 2 hours, this book gives you a very good basis, packaged in an exciting story. I think it's an essential read for anyone who works with teams or customers.
This stuff really works - By: , 11 Sep 2000
It helps you break out of the vicious circle we alll falll into at some point. That circle has four steps: lack of confidence (1), leading to hesitation (2), then mediocre results (3), then poor feedback from yourself or from others (4), leading back to further lack of confidence (1). It reallly helped me to motivate my assistant, as well as myself.
Practical but fun - By: , 09 Sep 2000
Picked this up at Heathrow, & finished it as I landed in Madrid. The storyline (and cartoons) keep you interested, & the techniques do work - at least for me! The combination of fiction & instruction works very well