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  • Ciani, Giacomo

    Idioma: Inglés

    Publicado por Independently Published, 2026

    ISBN 13: 9798263080112

    Librería: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Reino Unido

    Calificación del vendedor: 5 de 5 estrellas Valoración 5 estrellas, Más información sobre las valoraciones de los vendedores

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    EUR 21,67

    Envío por EUR 3,87
    Se envía de Reino Unido a Estados Unidos de America

    Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles

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    PAP. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.

  • Giacomo Ciani

    Idioma: Inglés

    Publicado por Independently Published, 2026

    ISBN 13: 9798263080112

    Librería: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Estados Unidos de America

    Calificación del vendedor: 5 de 5 estrellas Valoración 5 estrellas, Más información sobre las valoraciones de los vendedores

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    EUR 21,60

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    Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles

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    Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. This is not a book about success stories. It isn't, and that is a deliberate choice. There already exists an abundant production of texts celebrating extraordinary rises, flashes of genius, charismatic leaders, or favorable contexts turned into once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. Bookstores and online platforms are filled with manuals promising the formula for rapid growth, biographies recounting the path of great entrepreneurs, and essays explaining how to spot winning opportunities. These are stimulating reads, but they share an obvious limitation: every success story is unique. What works in one context rarely works in another, and turning an unrepeatable event into a universal rule risks misleading more than helping. Rich Dad Poor Dad, The 18 Rules of Success, Trade in a Day, Wealth in 4 Weeks, Financial Freedom in Two Afternoons a Month. That is not the focus here. Billion-dollar success stories are episodic, just as spectacular collapses are, but in between lies a whole spectrum: people and small businesses that, with some discipline and a few clear rules, can manage not to end up in default.Every victory has its own combination, difficult to replicate: the right timing, the right people in the right place, favorable economic conditions, a spark of intuition, and sometimes even a significant dose of luck. The sum of these factors may generate a positive outcome, but it does not constitute a model to follow word for word. That is why, viewed critically, books about success resemble rhetorical exercises more than operational tools. They can inspire, but rarely do they provide transferable rules for real life.Failure, on the other hand, repeats itself with surprisingly consistent patterns. It doesn't matter whether we are speaking of a multinational corporation, a small family business, or an individual managing their household finances: the dynamics that lead to collapse share common traits, recognizable and often predictable. The inability to read signs of change, overconfidence in one's own convictions, superficial risk management, the accumulation of unsustainable debt-these elements recur again and again. The names and industries change, but the underlying patterns look the same.Studying failure, then, is not an exercise in morbid curiosity but an act of pragmatism. Looking directly at what went wrong for others allows us to draw practical lessons, often far more useful than celebrating victories. Not because there exists any formula for total protection against mistakes, but because knowing the mistakes already made reduces the likelihood of repeating them. Other people's failures become a kind of preventive map: a set of warning signals anyone can learn to recognize.It is important to be clear: a book that speaks more of failure than of success does not set out to offer definitive solutions or guaranteed shortcuts. Its purpose is to provide a mirror. A mirror reflecting mistakes already made-sometimes by giants that seemed untouchable, other times by families or small business owners forced to confront the fragility of their balance sheets. This mirror does not serve to ridicule those who have fallen, nor to pass quick judgments. Failure carries concrete consequences: pain, loss, frustration. For that reason, it deserves respect. And it is precisely from respect that the possibility of learning can arise. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.

  • Ciani, Giacomo

    Idioma: Inglés

    Publicado por Independently published, 2026

    ISBN 13: 9798263080112

    Librería: California Books, Miami, FL, Estados Unidos de America

    Calificación del vendedor: 4 de 5 estrellas Valoración 4 estrellas, Más información sobre las valoraciones de los vendedores

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    Impresión bajo demanda

    EUR 21,61

    Gastos de envío gratis
    Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de America

    Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles

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    Condición: New. Print on Demand.

  • Giacomo Ciani

    Idioma: Inglés

    Publicado por Independently Published, 2026

    ISBN 13: 9798263080112

    Librería: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Reino Unido

    Calificación del vendedor: 5 de 5 estrellas Valoración 5 estrellas, Más información sobre las valoraciones de los vendedores

    Contactar al vendedor

    Impresión bajo demanda

    EUR 25,42

    Envío por EUR 43,51
    Se envía de Reino Unido a Estados Unidos de America

    Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles

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    Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. This is not a book about success stories. It isn't, and that is a deliberate choice. There already exists an abundant production of texts celebrating extraordinary rises, flashes of genius, charismatic leaders, or favorable contexts turned into once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. Bookstores and online platforms are filled with manuals promising the formula for rapid growth, biographies recounting the path of great entrepreneurs, and essays explaining how to spot winning opportunities. These are stimulating reads, but they share an obvious limitation: every success story is unique. What works in one context rarely works in another, and turning an unrepeatable event into a universal rule risks misleading more than helping. Rich Dad Poor Dad, The 18 Rules of Success, Trade in a Day, Wealth in 4 Weeks, Financial Freedom in Two Afternoons a Month. That is not the focus here. Billion-dollar success stories are episodic, just as spectacular collapses are, but in between lies a whole spectrum: people and small businesses that, with some discipline and a few clear rules, can manage not to end up in default.Every victory has its own combination, difficult to replicate: the right timing, the right people in the right place, favorable economic conditions, a spark of intuition, and sometimes even a significant dose of luck. The sum of these factors may generate a positive outcome, but it does not constitute a model to follow word for word. That is why, viewed critically, books about success resemble rhetorical exercises more than operational tools. They can inspire, but rarely do they provide transferable rules for real life.Failure, on the other hand, repeats itself with surprisingly consistent patterns. It doesn't matter whether we are speaking of a multinational corporation, a small family business, or an individual managing their household finances: the dynamics that lead to collapse share common traits, recognizable and often predictable. The inability to read signs of change, overconfidence in one's own convictions, superficial risk management, the accumulation of unsustainable debt-these elements recur again and again. The names and industries change, but the underlying patterns look the same.Studying failure, then, is not an exercise in morbid curiosity but an act of pragmatism. Looking directly at what went wrong for others allows us to draw practical lessons, often far more useful than celebrating victories. Not because there exists any formula for total protection against mistakes, but because knowing the mistakes already made reduces the likelihood of repeating them. Other people's failures become a kind of preventive map: a set of warning signals anyone can learn to recognize.It is important to be clear: a book that speaks more of failure than of success does not set out to offer definitive solutions or guaranteed shortcuts. Its purpose is to provide a mirror. A mirror reflecting mistakes already made-sometimes by giants that seemed untouchable, other times by families or small business owners forced to confront the fragility of their balance sheets. This mirror does not serve to ridicule those who have fallen, nor to pass quick judgments. Failure carries concrete consequences: pain, loss, frustration. For that reason, it deserves respect. And it is precisely from respect that the possibility of learning can arise. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.