I am currently an intern at Qualcomm and went to the HQ for a speech by the founder (Irwin Jacobs). I went in feeling optimistic and excited to learn the growth of a large company like QC from a startup to a Fortune 500 company. The speech wasn't all that enlightening, mainly about how they stuck to CDMA in the face of a growing GSM market and their main goal has always been to try and push innovation (FLOtv?), but afterward I slowly but surely harbored a feeling of foreboding that I do not have the drive or capacity to sail the entrepreneur ship. In other words, I collectively lost my shit.<p>That being said:<p>What are some books that can reiterate the tangibility of becoming a successful entrepreneur?<p>Biographies, essays, novels, whatevz. Something to put some fire in the belly.
Stanford Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders Podcast<p>It is not a book but is free on iTunes. I've lost count on how many times I've recommended it. Almost every speech leaves a "fire in the belly." There were two speeches about negotiations (not the Steve Young one) that were probably the most helpful to me but they all are good. Start at the beginning and work your way up.
Listen video interviews of some founders at <a href="http://mixergy.com/" rel="nofollow">http://mixergy.com/</a><p>Founder At Work is really really useful. It is startup biable. If you read it then surely you will get inspired <a href="http://www.foundersatwork.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.foundersatwork.com/</a>
Books:
Crush It
Founders At Work
Sway
Fascinate
Everything here: <a href="http://steveblank.com/books-for-startups/" rel="nofollow">http://steveblank.com/books-for-startups/</a><p>Podcasts:
Mixergy
This Week in Startups
Startups for the rest of us
Build something and try to sell it.<p>Better yet, do the above in reverse! Then write a book on what you did.<p>The best book I read on entrepreneurship was by Yvon Chouinard who started Patagonia. Don't remember the title, but I'm fairly sure it wasn't <i>Let My People go Surfing</i> since I read it over 10 years ago.
Books are great, but in all seriousness Mixergy.com is where you should look to park yourself at least twice a week.<p>There's no better starter of fire in the bellies than that place.
I am not sure how to say this, but books aren't exactly what you need. You can read a few, and sure they might help, but you won't get what you want.<p>If you're the type of person who goes to a lecture to see how a big company became a big company and survived the problems, then you sort-of already have what it takes.<p>I've read a ton of books until I got the most important message from all of them. Stop reading books and go create, experiment and see how it goes.
Lately I have been reading the biography of Grace Hopper which is essentially about the genesis of programming/programming languages/compilers etc. Super motivating to read about the passion and belief that was required to create out of the ether an entirely new world. <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Invention-Information-Lemelson-Studies-Innovation/dp/026201310X" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Invention-Information-Lemelson-Studies...</a>
"The Map of Innovation" by Kevin O'Connor is hands-down the best startup book I've ever read.<p><a href="http://amzn.to/9yN58l" rel="nofollow">http://amzn.to/9yN58l</a><p>It's very comprehensive; he provides key insights on how to spot the right trends, execute, and the right qualities to look for when recruiting. His track record at DoubleClick speaks for itself.
I think the solution to this problem is:<p>- Listen to motivational audio daily/religiously.<p>Earl Nightingale
Zig Ziglar
Brian Tracy<p>This site has a pretty good selection for reference:
<a href="http://www.nightingale.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.nightingale.com/</a>
Creators & Casualties of the Age of the Internet by Kieran Levis - The chapters on Steve Jobs alone will put some fire in your belly.<p>Delivering Happiness by Tony Hsieh - reading this now...inspirational.