Lean Six Sigma: coach me if you can - practical coaching story vs The Government Manager's Guide to Source Selection: GMEL series

Overall winner: Lean Six Sigma: coach me if you can - practical coaching story

Key Differences

Pick A (Mrs Anne Ponton) if you want a lower-priced, practical coaching book on Lean Six Sigma with more user feedback (4.80 from 6 reviews). Pick B (Charles D. Solloway) if you need a focused guide on government source selection and federal procurement topics and are comfortable with a higher-priced, single-review option

Lean Six Sigma: coach me if you can - practical coaching story

Lean Six Sigma: coach me if you can - practical coaching story

Mrs Anne Ponton • ★ 3.7/5 • Budget

A practical Lean Six Sigma coaching narrative. Highlights coaching approaches and real-world application benefits. Insight: mixed reactions to coaching availability

Pros

  • practical coaching narrative
  • real-world Lean Six Sigma context
  • clear focus on coaching approach
  • relevant to project management readers

Cons

  • limited customer data insights
  • no features listed
  • title may imply broader topics
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The Government Manager's Guide to Source Selection: GMEL series

The Government Manager's Guide to Source Selection: GMEL series

Charles D. Solloway • ★ 3.3/5 • Mid-Range

Guide on source selection for government management. Highlights decision criteria and process insights. Customer notes: mixed sentiment none; positive focus on clarity

Pros

  • clear guidance on source selection
  • focused on government management context
  • compact reference for professionals
  • well-structured for quick lookup

Cons

  • no features listed
  • limited customer insight data
  • single rating sample
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Head-to-Head

CriteriaWinner
Price Mrs Anne Ponton
Durability Tie
Versatility Tie
User Reviews Mrs Anne Ponton