Over the past ten years, he has debated with casino staff, statisticians, mathematicians, friends and other experts. All bar one were convinced that the casino could not be beaten — or if it could, then not consistently.
But Morton insists the experts are mistaken, something he has learned through sheer discipline, by keeping it simple and understanding that winning at roulette is a percentage game. This book explains in plain language just how easy it is to win or lose at roulette. Winning occasionally is simple. His aim was to win consistently. Morton, after watching, playing and listening all over the world, distilled the information, working out why he too had been losing too often.
From that base, Morton realised that winning every visit is impossible. Each spin of the wheel is a new and usually random event. Every spin is a fight against the casino's advantages. It was a challenge — to debunk the theorists, especially those who had never played. His research and hard work proved he was right: winning consistently is possible. Morton proved that mathematical theory and clinical statistics, flawless in concept, blinker common sense and have no place in determining why people win and lose in casinos.
After all, taking British casinos as a good example, the odds against the player can be as small as 1. Enough said! Despite the casino's edge and even playing with the American double-zero, roulette tackled with skill, discipline and experience is a game at which consistent winning is perfectly possible. But consistent winning does not mean that every casino visit ends with a celebration.
It means winning most of the time and ensuring that losses on the h. We wanted to keep up with the latest business books but found that time was a factor. So we divided out the work and each of us took a book and summarised it for the others. We though it might be a great idea to share these summaries with you. For a small price and a 3 minute time investment, our summary gives you some of the wisdom from the book, some food for thought and hopefully the impetus to make some time to read the whole book!
Why your goal must be winning, not just playing well. Choosing the right metrics to support your strategy. It's because they confuse strategy with vision and don't make the critical decisions it takes to win. Using the example of PandG's dramatic turnaround of its Olay skincare line, A. Lafley and adviser Roger Martin prescribe a disciplined approach to five strategic choices. Then, determine "where" you'll play PandG's mass-market channel to a younger buyer.
This opens up your possibilities for being distinctive and helps you choose "how" to win PandG's unique products. Then tap or develop the capabilities to deliver what your competitors cannot. Press the button start search and wait a little while. Please do not reload the page during the search. A typical file search time is about seconds. Callie hopes her connections with the franchise might get her foot in the door for a sports broadcasting job when she graduates.
She just has one rule: never date the players. Teen idol. King of Pop. Voice of the common man. Australian of the Year. John Farnham is the quintessential Aussie legend.
A family man at. From the daughter of business mogul Donald Trump and a rising star in the Trump organization, this New York Times bestseller is a business book for young women on how to achieve success in any field, based upon what Ivanka Trump has learned from her father and from her own. Home Playing To Win.
Playing to Win. Playing to Win by Alan G. Lafley,Roger L. Playing to Win by A. Playing to Win by Anonim. Playing to Win by David Sirlin. Playing to Win by Hilary Levey Friedman. Playing to Win by Saina Nehwal.
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