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Moore's previous two books, Crossing the Chasm and Inside the Tornado, are the bibles for many marketing professionals and product managers. In these books, Moore describes the life cycle common to the successful adoption of technology products and pinpoints moments in the cycle, for example, "the chasm," the "bowling alley," and the "tornado," where products can either flourish or fade away. In The Gorilla Game, Moore takes these concepts, with the help of coauthors Paul Johnson and Tom Kippola, and applies them to the task of finding gorilla stocks--ones that dominate their market niches. The book looks at how the market values technology stocks and provides case studies of markets where gorillas have been born. Moore and his coauthors put their ideas to the test in the final chapter and pick a portfolio of stocks that they believe have the potential to become winners in the gorilla game. The result is a highly perceptive investment guide that anyone who's a fan of Moore's earlier work will find exciting and profitable. This revised edition, published a year and a half after the first, includes a new chapter on valuing Internet stocks. --Harry C. Edwards --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
58 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Primer on Primates,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Gorilla Game: An Investor's Guide to Picking Winners in High Technology (Hardcover)
At first glance a high tech stock investment guide that relies critically on you being able to tell the difference between gorillas, monkeys and chimps appears unlikely to be a serious money maker. Yet if you had followed the investment philosophy outlined in Geoffrey Moore's Gorilla Game at the beginning of this decade, you could have turned $10,000 into a couple of million dollars. The stock market has attracted no end of charlatans and snake oil salesmen with a plethora of advice on how to invest and grow rich, ranging from complex mathematical techniques such as chaos theory to fairly simple advice such as buy stocks in companies you know and like. In its simplest form, most of the advice boils down to "buy low, sell high." though it is usually couched in more cultured language such as "buy at the peak of a stock's dividend yield ratio, and sell at its trough." Geoffrey Moore and his co-authors, Johnson and Kippola, have no use for such language. In a straight-forward and entertaining book, they outline how some high tech companies grow exponentially to dominate the segments in which they participate, how they become gorillas. Generally, the authors provided a lay-man's explanation of what has recently come to be known in economics as the Theory of Increasing Returns. Some of the high tech companies that best epitomize this theory are Microsoft, Intel, Cisco Systems and IBM in its heyday. These companies were able to get their proprietary architectures accepted as the standard (sometimes completely by luck), and they were smart enough to exploit this initial standardization and the high switching costs it entailed to gain market share rapidly and dominate their industries. These companies are the ones Moore calls Gorillas. In addition to the Gorilla, who is the dominant leader in a segment, we also have the Chimp (the challenger) and the Monkey (the follower). The chimp had a shot at being a gorilla but didn't make it. Unable to get over this, he limps along muttering "I could have been a contender." The example Moore brings up of a chimp is IBMs OS/2 operating system. The monkey has no such hang-ups and essentially mimics the gorillas product. An example would be AMD with its Intel-like chips. As Moore, and his co-authors point out, a monkey lives or dies on execution. From an investment strategy perspective, the rules are simple. If the company is a gorilla, buy the stock. If the company is a chimp, stay away from its stock. If the company is a monkey, it is probably a good trading stock (buy at the lows, sell at the highs). Perhaps the best part of using the gorilla game as an investment strategy is that it is a low maintenance strategy, letting you make money without biting your fingernails on a daily basis. The hard part is finding new gorillas--in many sectors they may never develop.
44 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An Eye-Opener for Everyone,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Gorilla Game: Picking Winners in High Technology (Hardcover)
The book does a pretty good job demystifying high-tech industries, particularly from a competitive strategy point of view. This is a must read for at least three kinds of people: amature investors, high-tech investors who concentrate solely on financial statements (but know nothing about Michael Porter), and value investors who pick low pe stocks. This is an eye-opener particularly for traditional value investors: gorillas usually have the highest pe (or p/sales) of the industry, and yet they are the winners. The book is a little too long. The idea can be explained clearly and thoroughly in the equivalant of a journal article. Many of the materials are sugar-coated for unsophisticated investors. I think the book is overrated, but deserves a careful read.
51 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
High-Tech Investment Bible,
By Dave (Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Gorilla Game: Picking Winners in High Technology (Hardcover)
This book has totally transformed my stock selection technique and resulted in a portfolio that is absolutely crushing the general market. I can not say enough about how highly I regard the information outlined in this book. Which high-tech stocks win on Wall St and why? The book sets forth a framework in which investors can understand how to value one stock in comparison to another. After reading it the world of investing finally started to make sense. This book is useful for any person that is out to find the next Microsoft. Buy this book.
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