Entrepreneurship and business books
Published coverage, practical guides, and follow-up reads collected in one place.
From testing ideas and choosing business models to pricing, funding, hiring, and scaling, this category distills entrepreneurship and management classics into clear takeaways you can act on. Founders, side-hustlers, solopreneurs, and small-team leaders will find guidance on product-market fit, cash flow discipline, marketing systems, and building resilient operations. Each review on Read To Be Rich translates big-picture strategies into stepwise decisions that reduce risk and accelerate sustainable growth. See what to apply now, what to avoid, and which frameworks actually move the needle—then dive into a book and plan your next step.
Summaries, Real Learning: How to Read Business Books in the Age of Automation
You want better decisions with money and work, but your reading list keeps growing. You buy the books, highlight a few pages, then real life takes the wheel. Me…
Skim or Study: A Practical Framework for Reading Business Books Faster and Better
If you are working, running a side hustle, or trying to invest more wisely, you probably have a stack of business books that felt urgent when you bought them. W…
Turn Highlights into Habits: A Founder's System to Apply Business Books in 30 Days
You finish a business book, feel smart for a day, then your calendar eats the insight. The note sits in a folder. Revenue does not change, your time still leaks…
The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz: A Candid Review for CEOs Facing Talent Markets and Hybrid Work
Hiring costs are up, top people want flexibility, and your board wants discipline on burn. If you lead a company right now, you are probably wondering how to ho…
Zero to One by Peter Thiel with Blake Masters: A Fresh Review for Founders Navigating Monopoly vs Platform Risk
If you are building a product that depends on someone else’s app store, search algorithm, or marketplace, you are living with platform risk. One policy change a…
The Lean Startup by Eric Ries: Does Build - Measure - Learn Still Work in the Product Boom
What do you do when your team is burning cash on experiments that look exciting in demos but do not move revenue or retention? Do you keep building, or call it…