This was an uneven book. It had some good concepts with bad execution.
The main character, Christian Gillette, becomes head of a major business when his predecessor dies. Christian inherits a lot of responsibility and a huge number of conspiracies swirling around him.
He's supposed to be a master schemer and manipulator, yet manages to either miss or guess wrong on most of what goes on around him. The main character is niave on some fronts, and several of the concepts here don't make a lot of sense. One of the supporting characters, for example, was given the hook of being a junk food junkie, but then is eating something different every time we see him, including scenes minutes apart.
Christian, the main character, sets up kidnappings, violates Federal reporting laws, but then has an issue with someone carrying lockpicks and using them. One of the antagonists is way over played as making people bow to his whims, including others calling him either "Mr." or by hsi first name utterly at random.
Also, on the technical end, the author needs to do some more research. With guns, a clip and a magazine are not the same thing. I can't speak to the corporate games he depicts, but some of this seems a bit off.