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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Book Review: The Four Hour Workweek

I2m_4hourworkweek Time management is not an easy skill to learn.  We all struggle everyday with finding the right amount of time to do all these things we need to do, and along the way we are bombarded with advice.  Much of it falls into cliche advice like finding time for what's "really important" in your life.  Tim Ferriss, however, has a different kind of advice to offer you in his new book, The 4 Hour Workweek.  Based on his life experiences at the age of 29, Ferriss offers useful advice on topics like outsourcing your life, creating a "low information diet," getting your boss to value performance over presence and taking "mini-retirements."  Each on its own represents an interesting way of looking at life ... but together the form the premise of his promise to you that a 4 hour workweek might be well within your future.  A friend of mine celebrated his 30th birthday yesterday, and in an effort to make him feel old - I picked up a book called "When I was Your Age ..." which has a list of accomplishments from people for every age.  I2m_headshot_timferriss_2So, for example, you can learn from the book that at age 13 Bill Gates first learned to program a computer.  In the book, for the age 29, the notable fact was the Ann Boleyn lost her head.  At age 29, Tim Ferriss has done infinitely better by publishing The Four Hour Workweek. 

I first met Tim at the SxSW show and have been following his efforts for the last two months, and reviewed an advance version of the book.  Now that it has launched, it quickly rocketed to nearly making the Top Bestseller list on Amazon  (its currently #11).  If you are interested at all in working less, getting more, and streamlining your life - you need to get this book.  Tim also publishes some great ongoing thoughts on his personal blog at www.fourhourworkweek.com/blog.

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Comments

kraloyun

Good and perfect.
Precious work.

Jasmine

Great work from Tim. I would highly recommend this book to everyone.

You should have read this, don't be left behind.
You can order a copy at http://snipurl.com/1ilc1

-Jasmine

MindComet

Great post! I'm excited to read more about the low information diet. I'm curious if Tim sat on any panel at SXSW.

Cassandra

Hi MindComet, Tim actually sat on panel at SXSW.:-)

DanM

There's a podcast of his presentation: http://2007.sxsw.com/blogs/podcasts.php/2007/03/19/the_4_hour_workweek_secretshttp://audio.sxsw.com/podcast/interactive/panel/2007/SXSW07.INT.20070312.TheFourHourWorkweek.mp3

DanM

here: http://audio.sxsw.com/podcast/interactive/panel/2007/SXSW07.INT.20070312.TheFourHourWorkweek.mp3

Alex

Great Information. Tim has provided a good information which really is helpful to everyone & it seems very interesting that the relevance of this to internet marketing is that, everyone thinks, that internet marketing is the best place to find and sell to a market. In some ways, this is true,

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  • Rohit works at Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide, part of WPP - a world leader in advertising and marketing services. The views expressed on this blog are his personal opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of his employer or its clients.

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