How do you separate the books that you buy to decorate your shelves from those that you buy to read? We tried to find some answers
In July 2014, Bill Gates named Business Adventures (1966) by John Brooks as his favourite business book. It happened to be Warren Buffett’s favourite as well. (In fact, Gates said Buffett had recommended it to him and lent him his copy because the book had gone out of print.) Not only did this nugget of information spawn a series of news articles—on Gates, on Buffett, on business, and everything between them—it also spiked the sale of Business Adventures in second-hand books stores, and prompted a reprint of the book, as well as an ebook version, by its original publisher Open Road. The book made it to the bestseller’s list on Amazon.com, ahead of hit fiction thrillers Gone Girl (by Gillian Flynn) and The Goldfinch (by Donna Tartt), and that summer’s non-fiction biggie Capital in the Twenty-First Century (by Thomas Piketty).
Such is the power of the world’s richest man dropping the name of an out-of-print book that inspired him.
But what is it that makes a good business book? Every year, we see a slew of titles making their way to the bestseller’s shelves in bookstores, and articles listing the ones that you must get your hands on. But what will one book give you that another will not?
Then there is this pattern of what is hailed as the next big thing in the world of business publications in one year, only to be forgotten by the following year. How do you know what to read, in that context?
Publishers of business books Forbes India spoke to have figured out, obviously, what to look for when they decide on a certain subject or author.
“A book that has relevance,” says Dibakar Ghosh, senior commissioning editor at Rupa Publications. This relevance might be in the form of a company that is being written about, or a subject.
“Of the four things that we would look for,” says Debasri Rakshit, commissioning editor at HarperCollins, “three are: The idea of the book; whether it has something to do with something new in the workspace; and the third is a company that is of interest at the moment.” The fourth variety, she says, are those that tell readers how to negotiate their way in their workplaces and become more successful.
The “idea”, for instance, could be to do with startups, adds Rakshit— something that is currently on the minds of a lot of people. “Books on entrepreneurs and startups are doing very well,” she says. “Today, young people have the opportunity to change jobs; they are ambitious.” The fact that there are thousands of students graduating from engineering and management colleges creates this constant pool of young readers who are looking for inspiration and new-age role models.
Researching and writing about companies today, says Rakshit, is easier than what it used to be. One of the primary reasons for this is the increased transparency in their functioning, and a willingness to share details about themselves. Two of HarperCollins’s successes in this category are The Maruti Story (2010) by RC Bhargava (chairman of Maruti Suzuki) with Seetha, and The Z Factor (2016), the autobiography of Subhash Chandra, founder and chairman of Zee Media.
The third category is what Sahay calls “popular” books, such as Gladwell’s The Tipping Point, Blink, and Outliers and Lindstrom’s Buyology.
Gates’s and Buffett’s choice of best business books has to do with this ‘test of time’ as well. Brooks’s Business Adventures is a collection of articles he had written for The New Yorker in the 1960s and, it might seem, would have little to do with contemporary businesses. As Gates wrote in his blog, gatesnotes.com: “After all, in 1966, when Brooks profiled Xerox, the company’s top-of-the-line copier weighed 650 pounds, cost $27,500, required a full-time operator, and came with a fire extinguisher because of its tendency to overheat. A lot has changed since then.”
Gates went on to say that “many of the particulars of business have changed. But the fundamentals have not”, making Brooks’s insights relevant through the decades. “John Brooks’s work is really about human nature, which is why it has stood the test of time,” he said. This “longevity” is what makes The Intelligent Investor (1949) by Benjamin Graham another favourite of Gates and Buffett.
But this is also true: Physical books provide readers with a reflective space that no other medium can. The fact that books allow you to pause and absorb what you have read is what makes them matter. “You can go out there and collect all kinds of information, but what are you absorbing?” asks Bagchi.
(This story appears in the 27 May, 2016 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)