Want to meet other people who’ve read REWORK? Want to talk with other business owners (or potential business owners) who believe ASAP is poison, meetings are toxic, planning is guessing, and inspiration is perishable? Or maybe you’re just curious about how these ideas can apply to your own business. Sound interesting to you?
Then check out a REWORK Meetup. They’re happening this June in over 100 cities across the world. These are face-to-face meetups in bookstores, cafes, restaurants, pubs, libraries, or anywhere else people agree to meet up and discuss REWORK and the ideas within.
I’ll be at the Chicago Meetup on June 3rd. Which one will you be at? Check out the REWORK Meetups, pick your city, sign up, and meet your fellow readers, thinkers, and doers.
Vik
on 25 May 10Hi Jason,
Link to the REWORK site seems to be not working, In this line of “Want to meet other people who’ve read REWORK? ” Check the Link for REWORK.Its not working!!
Thanks, Vikram
JF
on 25 May 10Fixed, thanks Vik.
Grant
on 25 May 10Looking forward to it at SF. Just finished reading it and wrote a blog post.
Anonymous
on 25 May 10Do you realise how much of a daily struggle it is for people like me who have read Rework yet still have to work 9 to 5 in the bureaucratic environment of a 3,000 employee company in London. Having read your excellent book it is a wonder how company’s such as mine even survive. Please do your best to get copies in the hands of the larger company.
Cory
on 26 May 10Looking forward to a local Rework meetup here in Greenville, SC!
@Anonymous The problem is that larger companies have extreme difficulty slimming down once they get large, in your case 3,000 employees. The book may still do some good, but the chances of it actually happening are nill. :(
James Tunge
on 26 May 10@Anonymous you don’t have to work in the 3000 strong bureaucracy. You can quit and scratch your itch.
Adam Musial-Bright
on 26 May 10I really enjoyed your book. A lot of refreshing ideas. I love the way: do it now – you have the knowledge and ability – forget others and do not copy. Very true!
There is just one thing I do not agree – even if I am a computer scientist having not the bigest sympathies to marketing departments with disappoint promisses – I am still think you too hard no marketing and there is a place for it in every project/product.
Overall a great book which can be read many times.
Ben
on 31 May 10I’m looking forward to the sydney meetup.
Deniss
on 31 May 10Same here
Martin Crockett
on 01 Jun 10London UK is looking strong. We have a venue confirmed and are closing in on numbers just behind San Francisco.
This discussion is closed.