Jack Covert Selects

Jack Covert Selects - Screw Business as Usual

December 09, 2011

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Screw Business as Usual by Richard Branson, Portfolio, 384 pages, $26. 95, Hardcover, December 2011, ISBN 9781591844341 By the time you get to page four of Richard Branson’s Screw Business as Usual, you will have already been treated to stories of Kate Winslett saving his mother from his burning home on Necker Island—literally carrying her soot-faced down the stairs as the fire rages behind them—and discussing the state of the world over dinner with the Queen and Barack Obama at Buckingham Palace. (And, to apologize for name-dropping, he shares a joke told to him by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.


Screw Business as Usual by Richard Branson, Portfolio, 384 pages, $26.95, Hardcover, December 2011, ISBN 9781591844341

By the time you get to page four of Richard Branson's Screw Business as Usual, you will have already been treated to stories of Kate Winslett saving his mother from his burning home on Necker Island—literally carrying her soot-faced down the stairs as the fire rages behind them—and discussing the state of the world over dinner with the Queen and Barack Obama at Buckingham Palace. (And, to apologize for name-dropping, he shares a joke told to him by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.) So, right away, you're under no illusion that Richard Branson lives a life similar to yours, but the book makes it very clear that we all live on the same planet.

Though he's far from what most of us would find to be ordinary, Branson's message in the book reinforces the sometimes-overlooked knowledge that we can each contribute to, create, and hasten change, and that "doing good is good for business." In doing so, he champions the everyday:

[The] power of the ordinary, everyday person to become entrepreneurs and change-makers to set up their own businesses, to seek their own fortune and be in control of their own lives, to say—screw business as usual, we can do it! We can turn things upside down and make a huge difference.
There have been many monikers for this idea, but Branson has come up with his own, Capitalism 24902, explaining:
Every single business person has the responsibility for taking care of the people and planet that make up our global village, all 24,902 circumferential miles of it.
Screw Business as Usual is a chronicle of those who have done just that, and there's a lot of good news to proselytize. Instead of ignoring the bad news, he shares stories of small enterprises like food retailer Jempson's and Finisterre clothing company—excellent examples in terms of what they're doing in local food sourcing and fabric innovation, but also because most of us have never heard of them, which makes the stories fresh, accessible, and their successes seemingly achievable. The book is chock-full of these small business victories and the successes of acting responsibility, stories of doing well by doing good, and demonstrates once again that Branson has a firm finger on the pulse of the entrepreneurial world.

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