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Permission Marketing : Turning Strangers Into Friends And Friends Into Customers by Seth Godin
$16.50
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Small Is the New Big: and 183 Other Riffs, Rants, and Remarkable Business Ideas by Seth Godin
$17.13
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All Marketers Are Liars: The Power of Telling Authentic Stories in a Low-Trust World by Seth Godin
$16.05
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The Big Red Fez: How To Make Any Web Site Better by Seth Godin
$9.56
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Unleashing the Ideavirus by Seth Godin
$11.20
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The largest portion of the book is devoted to how to sell an idea to your organization. His specific tactics range from irreverent, (let them pee on your ideas) to practical (how to build a prototype). One standout chapter explains how brainstorming can become boring. His alternative, "edgecraft," involves divergent thinking to add something remarkable to your product. His long grocery list of edges (safety, equality, invisibility, and hours of operation) suggest a genuine marketing manifesto. The ideas are bold and insightful, but can suffer from being presented in less than logical order. The book is also diminished by Godin's self-marketing, from using terminology in his previous books to naming key ideas after himself. These advertisements are unnecessary. This nervy little volume is bound to mother many inventions. --Barbara Mackoff
From Publishers Weekly
A slapdash mix of insight, jargon, common sense, inspiration and hooey, Godins follow up to last years Purple Cow argues that the way to make any product a bestseller is to couple it with "a feature that the consumer might be attracted to" whether or not she really needs it or wants it. "If it satisfies consumers and gets them to tell other people what you want them to tell other people, its not a gimmick," he argues. "Its a soft innovation." An entrepreneur, lecturer and monthly columnist for Fast Company, Godin knows his business history, and his book bursts with interesting case studies that define "free prize" thinking: e.g. Apples iPod, Chef Boyardees prehistoric pasta, AOLs free installation CDs. One of the problems with the book, however, is that its insistent use of needless jargon ("free prize," "purple cow," "edgecraft") clouds complicated issues and lumps dissimilar processes together. "Fix whats broken," Godin advocates on one page. "Inflame the passionate," he declares on another. Both of these ideas could certainly lead to business improvements, but they hardly use the same methods. Like Godins last book, this volume reads like a sugar rushfast and sweetand this may propel the author back onto the bestseller lists. To help jumpstart his sales, Portfolio will be packaging the first few thousand copies of the book inside cereal boxes. Now thats quite a gimmicker, soft innovation.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Inside This Book Citations: This book cites 6 books | 9 books that cite this book Explore: Citations | Books on Related Topics | Concordance | Text Stats Key Phrases - SIPs: soft innovation, free prize inside, free prizes Key Phrases - CAPs: Purple Cow, New York, Henry Ford, American Airlines, Bringing It Together (more) Browse Sample Pages: Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me! |
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