// Book comparison

The 48 Laws of Power vs Kanban

Which should you read? A side-by-side comparison of The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene and Kanban by David Anderson.

At a glance

The 48 Laws of Power Kanban
Rating ★ 4.6/5
Pages 258
Reading time ~6.5 h
Published 2010
Author Robert Greene David Anderson
Category Leadership Strategy & Management
Publisher Blue Hole Press

Choose The 48 Laws of Power if…

  • You're interested in leadership.

Choose Kanban if…

  • You're interested in strategy & management.
  • You want the higher-rated book (4.6/5).
  • You prefer a shorter read (~6.5 hours).
  • You want the more recent perspective (2010).

Key takeaways — The 48 Laws of Power

  • Understand the significance of strategic alliances in achieving power.
  • Recognize the importance of timing in executing your plans effectively.
  • Learn to manage perceptions to maintain control over your image and influence.
Read full The 48 Laws of Power summary →

Key takeaways — Kanban

  • Utilize WIP Limits (Work In Progress) to prevent team overload and ensure that resources are focused on completing current tasks before starting new ones.
  • Implement a Visual Kanban Board to provide real-time transparency into the status of all projects, making bottlenecks and blockers immediately obvious to all stakeholders.
  • Adopt an Evolutionary Change approach by starting with your current process and making incremental, data-driven adjustments based on actual workflow performance.
Read full Kanban summary →

The verdict

If you want the higher-rated, shorter read, start with Kanban. If you specifically need strategy & management, The 48 Laws of Power is the better fit. Both summaries are free — no signup required.

❓ FAQ

Is The 48 Laws of Power or Kanban better? +

Kanban has the higher reader rating (4.6/5 vs null/5), but "better" depends on your goal. The 48 Laws of Power focuses on leadership, while Kanban focuses on strategy & management. See the verdict below.

Which is shorter, The 48 Laws of Power or Kanban? +

Kanban is shorter (258 pages, ~6.5 hours) compared to The 48 Laws of Power (undefined pages, ~null hours).

Should I read The 48 Laws of Power or Kanban first? +

If you want the quicker, higher-rated read, start with Kanban. Otherwise read whichever matches your current goal — both summaries are free on BookAudio.