

Smartest Guys in the Room (10th-Anni Ed) : McLean, Bethany, Elkind, Peter, Nocera, Joe: desertcart.in: Books Review: extremely well researched - Brilliant book, dives into exhaustive detail. Sketches out the characters complexity really well. Worth a read to understand some of the behaviour flaws that ruin a giant corporation. Review: complication simplified - A good read. But difficult subject to follow. They have tried to make it understandable to the lay reader. I am not sure they have succeeded 100 %.



| Best Sellers Rank | #40,814 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #137 in Economic History (Books) #332 in True Accounts (Books) #1,585 in Analysis & Strategy |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (4,114) |
| Dimensions | 15.32 x 3.53 x 22.83 cm |
| Generic Name | BOOK |
| ISBN-10 | 1591846609 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1591846604 |
| Importer | Penguin Random House India Pvt Ltd |
| Item Weight | 522 g |
| Language | English |
| Net Quantity | 2.20 Kilograms |
| Packer | Penguin Random House India Pvt Ltd |
| Paperback | 480 pages |
| Publisher | Penguin USA; Reprint edition (26 November 2013) |
P**T
extremely well researched
Brilliant book, dives into exhaustive detail. Sketches out the characters complexity really well. Worth a read to understand some of the behaviour flaws that ruin a giant corporation.
B**M
complication simplified
A good read. But difficult subject to follow. They have tried to make it understandable to the lay reader. I am not sure they have succeeded 100 %.
A**K
Excellent Book
The Smartest Guys In the Room is a well-written, well-researched to unravel the financial and operational irregularities that led to Enron’s bankruptcy. It’s a compelling (and sometimes soapy) indictment of the worst side of business. Must read for all audit professionals
A**N
Its commiting suicide, if you abuse the system.
After reading this book, one can safely conclude that " the world will belive what you say, if you say with confidence and throw money to the audience". Makes a mokery of the all possible governance watch dogs, internal and external to an organization. One must, although, admit the sheer brillance of these guys to pull this off, for so long. A must early read, for all, to understand the suicidal practices of abusing the system.
S**A
A good book on the Enron saga
Its a good book. Goes to show how a good company can be fallible too due to few gullible at the top.
A**R
Simple and well written
Simply and well written, easy to understand without any jargons, good lesson for wannabe executives, old and new businesses also
A**I
Most financial frauds stem from uncontrolled optimism
Anyone who is interested in businesses, finance or investments, do read this book. It tells you that most financial frauds are not orchestrated with an intention to defraud, they are an outcome of people’s self centred behaviour which is short sighted and uncontrollably optimistic.
G**A
Interesting read
People aspect and the greed well captured. Recommend as a read to anyone running a business or believing in the goodness of people!
S**N
The Smartest Guys in the Room by Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind digs into one of the most infamous and largest corporate business scandals in America’s history. This was such a wild ride. Everything from corporate greed, mismanagement, cowardice, rivalry, a toxic work culture, and a need to constantly prove profitability to the public led to one fraud after another until Enron was literally built on a house of cards, or, to be more exact, on a house, nay, a mountain of debt. All this was hidden from the public investors they were supposed to protect, while executives were profiting from the soaring stock price. “So you take the dog and paint its feet yellow and its fur white and you paste an orange plastic beak on its nose, and then you say to your accountants, ‘This is a duck! Don’t you agree that it’s a duck?’ And the accountant say, ‘Yes, according to the rules, this is a duck.’ Everybody knows that it’s a dog, not a duck, but that doesn’t matter, because you’ve met the rules for calling it a duck.” - Former Enron employee Back in the early 2000s, when it all came crashing down, I remember only a few bits and pieces here and there. Mainly, I saw on television old white guys in the headlines dominating news channels regarding a business scandal and fraud. I failed to realize or feel the impact. Decades later, with more financial knowledge and investments made in the stock market, I wanted to finally revisit this saga and learn just how it all went down. It definitely blew my mind. “I’ve thought about this a lot, and all that matters is money. You buy loyalty with money. This touchy-feely stuff isn’t as important as cash. That’s what drives performance.” - Jefferey Skilling’s conversation with Terry Thorn A tremendous effort has obviously been made by the authors to untangle the Enron mess after they imploded to give us the inside scoop on how this scandal went down. Although it is a fairly big book, it clearly deserves every page, in my opinion, as it slowly and methodically laid out from the very start of Enron to its ultimate demise. There are a lot of players and actions involved. Although no CPA myself, I was shocked to at least have understood the mark-to-market strategy of reporting year-end earnings, especially how it was used to game the system. Although there were many other accounting tricks used to commit fraud, it basically came down to hiding losses on their balance sheet and presenting itself every quarter to investors, analysts, and Wall Street as the coolest company ever in hopes of raising its stock price. In fact, it was anything but effortless; there was nothing at Enron that required more effort, more cleverness, more deceit-more everything-than hitting its quarterly earnings targets. - Book authors The last few chapters of the book were particularly exciting and kept me reading all night. The inevitable crash was coming. You knew in hindsight, so you just kept waiting for it until it finally started to unravel, and it was like watching a car crash in slow motion, but only because we now know the full story and extent of the problem and how Enron got there. I can’t help but wonder how things would have turned out if Enron weren’t as crazed about boasting their stock price and actually reporting true earnings as well as executing on their actual ideas. Would they have been in the coveted top 10 position in the S&P500 index today? They genuinely had some good ideas and were truly ahead of their time, but they didn’t have the patience to see things through, not to mention a host of other issues as well.
J**E
Muy interesante libro que refleja la caída de un imperio energético (y financiero) así como el final de una era. Si no fuera porque los protagonistas vulneraron sistemáticamente la ley con muchas de sus decisiones (y su desmedida ambición), casi se podría sentir admiración por ellos. No todo vale en esta vida para ganar y este libro sirve un ejemplo paradigmático.
J**S
This outstanding, detailed and methodically researched book gives a blow by blow account of Enron in its glory days and Its eventual downfall. Highly recommend.
K**O
SOX 法が作られる元となったエンロン事件のドキュメンタリー。 J-SOX法は、さまざまな内部統制のプロセスを実装することを要求するが、本書を読むと実はエンロンはその多くのプロセスを実は持っていたことがわかる。ただ、プロセスは、このような事件を起こすことを防げるわけではなかった。 J-SOX 法の対策がおわったら、次に何を行うべきか。いろいろなヒントが詰まっていると思う。 実務の話はここまでとしても、単純に人間関係のドキュメントとしても、一級品である。映画は日本語字幕つきで DVD になっているものの、本書の翻訳はまだのようだ。一刻も早く翻訳が出てほしいと思う。
J**N
AWESOME
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