From Publishers Weekly
Marketing consultant Horowitz (Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World) offers the latest addition to the deluge of morally-centered business tomes. In one way, it's an overturning of traditional corporate wisdom-see your competitors as your allies, not your adversaries, Horowitz suggests-but it's also something we've been hearing an awful lot of lately: build meaningful relationships with your customers, view your employees as your partners and so on. Nevertheless, the arguments are all sound and illustrated with the customer-obsessed success stories of ventures like Saturn and Nordstrom. Horowitz is at his best when displaying his canny understanding of the media world, advising how to fit your business's message with the media's need to produce timely, relevant stories. But it also feels like the author is trying to riff on too many ideas, as he skips from thoughts on bartering to copywriting to investing. If readers don't mind following the occasionally meandering structure, they'll find this to be a bountiful source of marketing tips.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
A must read for anyone who wants to understand the new way of business and doing it well. --
John Kremer, author 1001 Ways to Market Your BookA must read for anyone who wants to understand the new way of business and doing it well. --
John Kremer, author 1001 Ways to Market Your Book<br /><br />Combines the best of marketing and relationship theory with real-world examples and practical advice. --
Melany Rigner, editor Writer's Digest Magazine<br /><br />Horowitz's call for ethics in the business world is just as relevant to the world of public management and politics. --
Robert B. Reich, Former U.S. Secretary of Labor<br /><br />If you're interested in success, you need to read this book. --
Sheldon Bowles, co-author, with Dr. Ken Blanchard, Raving Fans and three other books<br /><br />People want to change the paradigm toward cooperation and people-centered behavior... I am delighted to recommend this book. --
Jack Canfield, CEO, Chicken Soup for the Soul Enterprises<br /><br />[Principled Profits] challenges traditional marketing methodology and suggests a more socially conscious [strategy]. --Various Endorsers
Combines the best of marketing and relationship theory with real-world examples and practical advice. --
Melany Rigner, editor Writer's Digest MagazineHorowitz's call for ethics in the business world is just as relevant to the world of public management and politics. --
Robert B. Reich, Former U.S. Secretary of LaborIf you're interested in success, you need to read this book. --
Sheldon Bowles, co-author, with Dr. Ken Blanchard, Raving Fans and three other booksMarketing consultant Horowitz (Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World) offers the latest addition to the deluge of morally-centered business tomes. In one way, it's an overturning of traditional corporate wisdom-see your competitors as your allies, not your adversaries, Horowitz suggests-but it's also something we've been hearing an awful lot of lately: build meaningful relationships with your customers, view your employees as your partners and so on. Nevertheless, the arguments are all sound and illustrated with the customer-obsessed success stories of ventures like Saturn and Nordstrom. Horowitz is at his best when displaying his canny understanding of the media world, advising how to fit your business's message with the media's need to produce timely, relevant stories. But it also feels like the author is trying to riff on too many ideas, as he skips from thoughts on bartering to copywriting to investing. If readers don't mind following the occasionally meandering structure, they'll find this to be a bountiful source of marketing tips. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --
Publishers WeeklyPeople want to change the paradigm toward cooperation and people-centered behavior... I am delighted to recommend this book. --
Jack Canfield, CEO, Chicken Soup for the Soul EnterprisesShel Horowitz's book shows how honest, ethical marketing can lead to big profits. Principled Profit promotes effective ways of marketing that are founded on honesty and integrity. I think this is a wonderful thing. Too many people in business think that just because it's 'business' they can do whatever they want in order to succeed. It's a strange image: people kiss their kids goodbye in the morning, hug their spouses and then, once at work, throw away all the individual values and principles they hold so dear in their homes and in their communities. The excuse? "It's just business." That's not good enough. What happened within companies like Enron and WorldCom has illustrated how badly things go wrong when we hide under the protection of, "It's just business." Shel's book shows us a different path. He shows us how to make money while still standing by our personal values. He demonstrates how honesty and decency can be the foundations of marketing success. Here's how he puts it in his introduction: "Too many businesses see marketing as a weapon of war. They think that to succeed, they have to climb over their competitors, fool their customers, and herd their employees into constricted conformity. I think that's just plain wrong." He uses numerous examples, case histories and quotations to illustrate and demonstrate how effectively one can market by putting aside all notions of 'war' and 'winning'. You'll find examples drawn from large businesses and small, with everything in between. That's the beauty of this book and Shel's thinking: he stands on honesty and integrity, while at the same time offering practical, proven ways in which to market effectively. --
Nick Usborne, Excess Voice[Principled Profits] challenges traditional marketing methodology and suggests a more socially conscious [strategy]. --
ForeWord Magazine
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