Your Belief Quotient: 7 Beliefs That Sabotage or Support Your Success vs Prisoners of Our Thoughts: Viktor Frankl's Principles for Meaning in Life and Work
Overall winner: Prisoners of Our Thoughts: Viktor Frankl's Principles for Meaning in Life and Work
Key Differences
Prisoners of Our Thoughts (Alex Pattakos & Elaine Dundon) is a revised and expanded edition focused on meaning and broadly applicable life and work insights with many more reviews (215) and a strong rating; Your Belief Quotient (Lisa Van Allen PhD) offers a concise 7-belief framework for identifying sabotaging vs supporting beliefs with a slightly higher average rating but far fewer reviews (6). Pick Prisoners of Our Thoughts if you want a meaning-centered, widely reviewed, expanded edition; pick Your Belief Quotient if you prefer a compact, belief-focused framework and higher average rating from a small sample
Your Belief Quotient: 7 Beliefs That Sabotage or Support Your Success
Practical guide exploring 7 beliefs shaping success. Highlights how beliefs can hinder or help progress. Customer insight reflects mixed or nuanced perspective
Pros
- clarifies impact of beliefs on outcomes
- practical framework for self-reflection
- concise guidance for personal growth
- accessible for self-improvement readers
Cons
- no listed features
- limited customer insight data
- subjective outcomes may vary
Prisoners of Our Thoughts: Viktor Frankl's Principles for Meaning in Life and Work
Explores Viktor Frankl's principles for discovering meaning in life and work. Provides practical insights for personal and professional growth. Customer note highlights actionable relevance
Pros
- based on Viktor Frankl's principles
- practical guidance for meaning at work
- revised and expanded third edition
- clear, accessible language
Cons
- no features listed
- no customer insights provided
- no price/availability information
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Lisa Van Allen PhD |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Alex Pattakos and Elaine Dundon |
| User Reviews | Alex Pattakos and Elaine Dundon |