Books about Ineffective from Amazon.com



The 7 Habits of Highly Ineffective People: Low Effort Lessons in Mismanaging for Success
An unauthorized parody of the best-selling success guide, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, shows how to maintain the appearance of effort while goldbricking, receive credit for work done by others, and irritate colleagues. Original..
Price: $8.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Wheel, Deal, and Steal: Deceptive Accounting, Deceitful CEOs, and Ineffective Reforms
Global financial scandals didn’t stop with Enron, WorldCom, or Tyco. In fact, they’re still not over. In Wheel, Deal, and Steal, Harvard Business School professor Daniel Quinn Mills shows investors how imperial CEOs continue to steal from their investors - and how the rules intended to protect investors continue to fail. Mills outlines comprehensive reforms to clean up the system and keep it clean. Best of all, he shows small investors how to protect what’s left - and maybe even recover their losses..
Price: $10.25 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Graham Formula: Why Most Decisions for Christ Are Ineffective
A Scandal Bigger Than Jimmy Swaggart How the narrow path to salvation has become a four-lane highway. If you're a pastor or evangelist, you probably know the truth: About 90% of seekers that come forward in altar calls don't join a church. Yet, many pastors and evangelists continue to report a 100% salvation rate for all who come to the altar. Why? Patrick McIntyre's fascinating new book The Graham Formula: Why Most Decisions for Christ are Ineffective, exposes current methods of evangelism that produce a staggering number of stillborn - instead of born again - Christians. In his book, McIntyre examines why Billy Graham, the most famous evangelist developed a three-part formula, producing according to Graham, a 25% born-again rate among those who made decisions for Christ at his crusades. But most evangelists and pastors use only one-third of Graham's formula for success, turning it into a recipe for disaster. By giving seekers a small but deadly injection of hope, and then telling them they're saved, real salvation is even farther off. And the epidemic is church-wide. Charles E. Hackett, national director of the Assemblies of God home missions said, "we realize approximately 95 out of every hundred will not become integrated into the church." Church Growth magazine reported a 6% retention rate for 18,000 decisions. In 1995, a leading U.S. denomination reported 384,057 decisions. Only 6% were retained. Peter Wagner admitted only 3% to 16% of those who make a decision at crusades end up responsible members of a church. What started out as a temporary, questionable, timesaving device because of a shortage of counselors at Billy Graham crusades is now THE normal practice in thousands of churches across America.If you want to give an altar call that assured genuine results, identify the two evidences of salvation, and help nominal Christians understand their true condition, a prerequisite of revival, read The Graham Formula..
Price: $7.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The 77 Habits of Highly Ineffective Christians
With humor and razor-sharp irony, broadcaster and author Chris Fabry identifies and elaborates on 77 habits guaranteed to make you into the highly innefective Christian that you never wanted to be. Caution: this book may touch your sore spots..
Price: $1.93 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Pursuit of Absolute Integrity: How Corruption Control Makes Government Ineffective (Studies in Crime and Justice)
In this comprehensive and controversial case study of anticorruption efforts, Frank Anechiarico and James B. Jacobs show how the proliferating regulations and oversight mechanisms designed to prevent or root out corruption seriously undermine our ability to govern. By constraining decision makers' discretion, shaping priorities, and causing delays, corruption control—no less than corruption itself—has contributed to the contemporary crisis in public administration.

"Anechiarico and Jacobs . . . have pushed aside the claims and posturing by officials and reformers and revealed a critical need to reevaluate just what we have and are doing to public servants, and to the public, in the name of anti-corruption."—Citylaw

"A timely and very useful addition to the new debate over corruption and reform."—Michael Johnston, American Political Science Review
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Price: $16.97 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Treating depression doesn't improve MI survival, trial finds. (CBT Found Ineffective).(myocardial infarction, cognitive-behavioral therapy)(Brief Article): An article from: Clinical Psychiatry News
This digital document is an article from Clinical Psychiatry News, published by International Medical News Group on April 1, 2002. The length of the article is 750 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Treating depression doesn't improve MI survival, trial finds. (CBT Found Ineffective).(myocardial infarction, cognitive-behavioral therapy)(Brief Article)
Author: Bruce Jancin
Publication:Clinical Psychiatry News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: April 1, 2002
Publisher: International Medical News Group
Volume: 30 Issue: 4 Page: 12(1)

Article Type: Brief Article

Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $5.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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