February 15th, 2011

UPDATED (2/16/11): Hoover’s Online Pro access has been restored!
The Hoover’s Online Pro database link is erroneously landing Duke users on a login page instead of connecting automatically to the Hoover’s site.
We have contacted Hoovers (D&B) and they are working on the access issue. In the interim, we recommend that Duke users select an alternative resource for company and industry information. OneSource, ThomsonONE, and S&P NetAdvantage are excellent options to try.
Our apologies for the delayed access to Hoover’s and thanks for your patience while we work with the vendor to resolve the issue.
Posted by Carlton Brown in Library Tech Support | No Comments »
February 14th, 2011
The latest additions to our DVD collection are below.
Book of Eli
The Kids are All Right
Red
Secretariat
True Grit (1969)
Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
Life as We Know It
Conviction
Never Let Me Go
Spartacus: Blood and Sand
Takers
Stone
Animal Kingdom
Freakonomics
Paper Men
Jack Goes Boating
Adventures of Power
Feed the Fish
Let Me In
Cyrus
Posted by Paula Robinson in New Resources | No Comments »
Tags: DVDs
February 9th, 2011

Farrell, Greg . Crash of the titans : greed, hubris, the fall of Merrill Lynch, and the near-collapse of Bank of America. Crown Business, 2010.
Engrossing and infuriating in equal measure, Crash of the Titans is a story of two troubled companies during the economic crisis, 2007 -2009. On the surface, this book covers the collapse of Merrill Lynch and its sale to Bank of America. But the real story is about the deeply flawed people who ran those companies, who failed to understand the risks they were undertaking and who failed to act in time to save their firms.
Author Greg Farrell, correspondent for the Financial Times, has written a riveting tale of arrogance, posturing and gamesmanship. On Wall Street, preoccupation with bonuses blinded corporate leaders to the financial risks in fixed income departments at Merrill Lynch and other firms. Colossal losses in these departments threatened to bankrupt their companies. After Merrill’s collapse, executives awarded themselves $3 billion in bonuses at the same time as they were laying off thousands of rank and file employees. Failed leadership and epic mismanagement at Merrill Lynch doomed a company that once epitomized the American spirit.
After a hasty decision to acquire Merrill Lynch, Bank of America executives in Charlotte were blindsided by additional losses. At the same time, the bank generated its own losses that the CEO could not explain. Stockholders were outraged about the bonuses paid to Merrill executives. And merging the cultures of the two companies proved difficult. In two years, a strong and profitable bank was forced to rely on federal bailout funds for survival.
Also available as an audiobook.
© Reviewer: Meg Trauner & Ford Library – Fuqua School of Business.
All rights reserved.
Posted by Meg in Book Reviews | No Comments »
Tags: Audiobooks, Company history, Financial Crisis
February 2nd, 2011

Doggett, Peter. You never give me your money : the Beatles after the breakup. HarperCollins, 2009.
The dust jacket to Peter Doggett’s new book claims that “the world stopped in 1970 when Paul McCartney announced that he was through with the Beatles.” Not exactly. And as Doggett makes clear in You Never Give Me Your Money, quitting the Beatles was not easily done.
This financial and legal story begins in 1967, at the height of the Beatles’ popularity, when the Fab Four owe 3 million pounds in taxes to the UK government. Setting up Apple Corps as a tax dodge, their earnings are now subject to corporation tax rather than personal income tax (94% marginal rate), and their expenses are deductible. The Beatles also envision the holding company as a utopian business empire and they establish companies in music publishing, retailing, tailoring and others, all run by their friends.
Running in parallel is the Beatles’ drama – the petty jealousies, the backbiting, the sex, drugs and Maharishi, and later the financial disputes and litigation, all meticulously researched and excruciatingly detailed. Midway through the book, the weary reader thinks “So break up already.” And that’s the point. The Beatles could not break up. The business arrangements made years earlier had locked them into a continuing melodrama, like a dysfunctional family. There was no divorcing each other.
For serious Beatles fans and for those interested in the entertainment industry.
© Reviewer: Meg Trauner & Ford Library – Fuqua School of Business.
All rights reserved.
Posted by Meg in Book Reviews | No Comments »
Tags: Music and Media
January 31st, 2011
What was once a series of advertising related directories became an online source a few years back. Regrettably, the publishers of SRDS hasn’t figured out how to integrate all these directories into a more integrated search platform, leaving the user to trawl through each publication rather than being able to search them all at once. To me, this is unfortunate because deep within this hodgepodge of directories are details not found anywhere else.
Wondering how many cooking magazines there are, how much it would cost to advertise in them, or how many subscribers there were for each? Then use SRDS Consumer Media Advertising Source. Or my favorite gem, Local Market Audience Analyst includes demographic and lifestyle information on the city/county level, so if you’ve wondered what the average person in Greensboro thinks about buying locally this would be your source.
Hopefully the publisher will upgrade their search engine, but use patience, you’ll be glad you did.
Posted by Jane in Featured Resources | No Comments »
January 27th, 2011

Here’s the January 2011 installment of Ford Library Director, Meg Trauner’s selections of five recent business books recommended to Fuqua Dean Blair Sheppard.
Click the titles below for information on location and availability.
Lords of strategy: the secret intellectual history of the new corporate world by Walter Kiechell III.
Academics and consultants focused on ideas launch the field of business strategy and develop the framework for describing how companies achieve competitive advantage over others.
The shallows: what the internet is doing to our brains by Nicholas G. Carr
The calm, focused mind of the book reader is being replaced by the new mind of the internet user who finds it difficult to pay attention and to engage in learning. Read our full review.
The big short: inside the doomsday machine by Michael Lewis.
Four players in the subprime mortgage market make millions by betting against the market and shorting risky mortgage deals called CDO contracts. Read our full review.
Crash of the titans: greed, hubris, the fall of Merrill Lynch, and the near-collapse of Bank of America by Greg Farrell
The story of two troubled companies run by deeply flawed people whose failure to understand the risks they were undertaking caused their firms to founder.
Delivering happiness: a path to profits, passion and purpose by Tony Hsieh
CEO of Zappos.com reveals how he built a dot com business, LinkExchange, which he sold to Microsoft for $265 million. His next start-up, Zappos.com, struggled to make payroll before becoming a huge success. Read our full review.
© Reviewer: Meg Trauner & Ford Library – Fuqua School of Business.
All rights reserved.
Posted by Meg in Book Reviews | No Comments »
January 26th, 2011

“It is a little known fact that tea has more caffeine than coffee.” Pound for pound that is true, yet by the brewed cup, coffee has twice the amount of caffeine as tea. So why has this saying been floating around for 30 years? Because it is fun to debunk conventional wisdom.
Three new books in the Ford Library challenge commonly held beliefs about business.
Colvin, Geoffrey. Talent is overrated : what really separates world-class performers from everybody else. Portfolio, 2010. – also in audiobook format
Most people believe that those who are exceptionally talented in fields such as music, chess, sports, public speaking or leadership, have an innate ability, something that they were born with. Yet author Geoff Colvin reports that expert performance is the result of deliberate practice – intense devoted effort for many years, often with a teacher’s help. With focus and concentration over many hours, ordinary people increase their mental capacity or skill level, becoming world class. Employees and organizations can apply the principles of deliberate practice to improve performance at work. This engrossing read was rated as “essential” by Daniel Pink in Drive.
Read more …
Posted by Meg in Book Reviews | 1 Comment »
Tags: Management
January 24th, 2011
Our latest additions to the DVD collection:
The American
The A-Team
Case 39
Despicable Me
Devil
Gasland
Legend of the Guardians
Shinobi : Heart under Blade
Dinner for Schmucks
Easy A
Howl
Legacy
Machete
The Other Guys
Resident Evil : Afterlife
Salt
Social Network
The Town
Wall Street : Money Never Sleeps
Pillars of the Earth
Posted by Paula Robinson in Featured Resources | No Comments »
January 20th, 2011

Menn, Joseph. Fatal system error : the hunt for the new crime lords who are bringing down the Internet. Public Affairs, 2010.
Cybercrime is serious business and the internet is more vulnerable than most people realize. A reporter for the Financial Times illustrates this important topic through a true story that reads like a crime thriller, taking the reader worldwide in this hunt for justice.
The story begins with a 25 year old computer nerd from California who is hired by an internet gambling business run out of Costa Rica. An unidentified hacker is crashing the website, causing millions in lost revenues, until protection money is paid. As the story unfolds, the hackers evolve from small time thieves to an organized gang of Russian extortionists. The gambling business reveals itself as controlled by criminals, including the Mob, who are also involved with identity theft and internet fraud.
As the story moves to Moscow, author Menn introduces his second colorful character, a British high-tech agent, and describes a world where top cyber criminals are protected by the Russian government. Prosecution is impossible because the governments in Russia and China are allies of organized crime for political purposes, such as stealing defense secrets of other governments and monitoring political dissidents.
At the end of the book, Menn calls for readers to be more vigilant about security on their own hardware, by using anti-virus software that updates automatically and to guard personal information on social networks.
© Meg Trauner & Ford Library – Fuqua School of Business.
All rights reserved.
Posted by Carlton Brown in Book Reviews | No Comments »
Tags: Technology
January 12th, 2011

The year has ended and the votes are in. On Marketplace.com by American Public Media, these respected reader/writers identified their favorite business books of 2010
Click the titles below for information on location and availability.
Posted by Meg in Book Reviews | 1 Comment »