Formula 1 teams are like startups because they also have a "limited budget"? Perhaps only in the sense that the amount of money available to them is finite, but c'mon. Toyota spent $445m on their F1 team in 2008.
In the 2010 season it looks like some new teams will be having a lot more of the startup dynamic, take Lotus, Campos, US F1 or Virgin Racing, because they're up against teams with big budgets like McLaren and Ferrari and they will have to find ways to win that are different. For example, US F1 does not have a wind tunnel, they've chosen to skip it and use CFD techniques instead.
Getting to Plan B by John Mullins and Randy Komisar is another good book from 2009. It provides a framework to arrive at a business model that works with lots of analogs from successful companies. A nice addition to the customer development genre.
To me the list in the post is too broad. In building up entrepreneurial skills, besides regular good business books, I tried to put together a list that covered a) inspirational stories, b) reference tomes, and c) practical advice.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 39.1 ms ] threadhttp://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2008/09/22/toyota-has-biggest-f1-...
Even so, that book would still be an interesting read.
Regarding the book list, nah...
For the 2010 season there is a budget cap in place at ~$65MM.
http://blog.aparicio.org/entrepreneur-books/
The purpose of my list was to expose lesser known books that I read this year which I think can make even a bigger impact for entrepreneurs.