Money For All: The Underground Playbook For DeFi And Blockchain vs The Risk Black Book: What They Do Not Teach You at Banks and Business Schools
Overall winner: The Risk Black Book: What They Do Not Teach You at Banks and Business Schools
Key Differences
Mohit Arora's Risk Black Book (A) targets banking and business-education audiences with a higher review count and a clear niche focus; David Cameron Gikandi & William Gikandi's Money For All (B) targets DeFi and blockchain readers with stronger topical relevance to decentralized finance and fewer reviews. A has more customer feedback and a narrowly focused risk-management angle, while B emphasizes blockchain/DeFi expertise and is listed in a lower price tier
Money For All: The Underground Playbook For DeFi And Blockchain
An exploration of decentralized finance and blockchain concepts. Highlights how these ideas could impact prosperity and financial systems. Customer insight: mixed signals from reader perspectives
Pros
- introduces DeFi concepts
- explores blockchain impact on finance
- clear author perspectives
Cons
- no features listed
- limited customer insight data
- no price-related details
The Risk Black Book: What They Do Not Teach You at Banks and Business Schools
A guide exploring risk concepts not typically covered in traditional banking and business education. It offers practical insights for understanding real-world risk dynamics. Customer insight: mixed reactions to depth and applicability
Pros
- clarifies non-traditional risk ideas
- focus on real-world banking context
- taps into practical risk awareness
- concise reference for professionals
Cons
- unclear feature details
- mixed depth across topics
- customer insights sparse
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | David Cameron Gikandi, William Gikandi |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Mohit Arora |
| User Reviews | Mohit Arora |