Five strategic thinking books recommended.

The following are five good books on strategic thinking about all kinds of decisions you will encounter in your life and how to think about life strategies when you encounter changes in your life.

First,? decision-making

The author is Professor Mao Zhiguo, a full-time teacher in the School of Management of Jiaotong University, and a book written by Mr. Mao Zhiguo, Minister of Communications, which is a masterpiece about strategy. Based on a solid theory, this book describes the decision-making process and all aspects that should be considered.

Second, the talents waiting in the future.

This book puts forward six key abilities that future talents need: first, not only function, but also design. Second, not only arguments, but also stories. Third, not only talk about professionalism, but also talk about integration. Fourth, not only talk about logic, but also care. Five, not only serious, but also fun. Sixth, we should not only pay attention to making money, but also pay attention to meaning. Artists, inventors, designers, storytellers, caregivers, consultants and macro people will become the next wave of upstarts in the workplace, enter the high-paying class of society and enjoy a happy life.

Third,? Who moved my cheese?

This book tells you through a short story that sometimes change is necessary, and you must take action as soon as possible, otherwise you may lose what you originally had. We are often bound by past habits, thinking that the past phenomenon will remain unchanged and the future will remain unchanged, but the future situation will never be what we think. This is a very thought-provoking book.

Fourth, the trough.

The book written by Seth Golding, an international marketing guru, tells us that giving up is sometimes right. No matter how hard you try, it's still useless to go in the wrong direction. If you encounter a dead end, you should flee as soon as possible and choose a field where you can give full play to your talents.

The origin of thinking: Kenichi Ohmae's McKinsey thinking.

Kenichi Ohmae told us that only by training our minds can we change our thinking mode and find solutions. No one knows how to solve things from the beginning. Libraries and the Internet can't cultivate your ability to think independently. The correct answer is guided by your own thoughts.