Best e-commerce books according to redditors

We found 7 Reddit comments discussing the best e-commerce books. We ranked the 5 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top Reddit comments about E-Commerce:

u/whacim · 3 pointsr/Accounting

This is probably more than what you are looking for, but I’ll go ahead and pass on what I have been using. I was already thinking about putting together a less expensive, non-Becker CPA exam strategy for r/accounting once I pass all the exams; so this will be a good warm up.
I haven’t taken all of the exams yet (I have passed the ones I have taken), but I can tell you the resources that have seemed to help the most far. I am pretty cheap, so I have tried to obtain my materials as inexpensively as possible (which is odd because my employer is paying for everything upfront).

For all of the exams I have purchased the Wiley CPA exam prep books; If you are lucky you might be able to find them at your local library.

I also use the Gleim multiple choice questions, and simulations. Gleim questions are in my experience more challenging than the real test questions, which make the actual exams seem not so bad (which is a great confidence booster). I try to answer 1500-2000 MC questions in the last couple of weeks leading up to the exam. I went through the Gleim regulation simulation questions once before the exam, and they really helped me a lot.

For BEC I pretty much relied on tons of Gleim MC questions, and the Wiley materials. I also used my managerial accounting textbook for reviewing cost accounting.

Additional materials I used for REG were my undergrad Business Law textbook, and the Federal Taxation book I mentioned in my last post.

For FAR (the test I am preparing for now), it had been so long since I took any financial accounting courses, I felt I needed a more fundamental review. I have been working through Schaums Outline of Intermediate Accounting I, Second Edition and Schaums Outline of Intermediate Accounting II, Second Edition. I have also been reading Governmental Accounting Made Easy, which has been helping with governmental accounting concepts (I never covered this in school). I am hoping that Wiley and Gleim materials will be sufficient for IFRS.

I’ll have to get back to you on AUD in a few months, but I am assuming that it will probably be a Gleim, Wiley, and old text book combo.

I hope that this helps. It has worked pretty well for me, but everybody learns a little different. Good luck!

u/jazzmoses · 3 pointsr/btc

> bitcoin will not prevent the government from bailing out banks, or any enterprise that "is too big to fail"

The ability of governments to bail out institutions with huge sums of cash will be greatly restrained when their state currencies fail and they can no longer print money at will.

I do agree with you that Bitcoin does not need to mean an end to third-party banking, lending or FR, nor do I believe that it should, but you don't seem to appreciate that Satoshi did express deep political motivations for developing Bitcoin.

I would recommend The Book of Satoshi for among other things a good primer on Satoshi's political leanings.

u/sealed · 1 pointr/technology

if you keep lots of low quality score keywords in your account, it is very easy and possible to hurt the account-level quality score associated with your account. this has potentially disastrous implications in the long run. of course, as long as your keywords are profitable, you should probably keep them activated, but quality score maintenance is a very essential and overlooked skill.

In case the QS conversation continues, I HIGHLY recommend this book to anyone who works in PPC on a day-to-day basis: http://www.amazon.com/Quality-Score-Resolution-Craig-Danuloff/dp/0615479383

u/eric_sammons · 1 pointr/Bitcoin

The best advanced book on Bitcoin is Andreas Antonopoulos' Mastering Bitcoin.

And if I may, you could consider my book Bitcoin Basics:101 Questions and Answers for a more general overview of Bitcoin.