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Contagious: Why Things Catch On

Contagious: Why Things Catch On

byJonah Berger
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
Jaclyn Ryan
5.0 out of 5 starsVery good read!!
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2020
New york time’s best seller, “Contagious: why things catch on”, by Jonah Berger, goes through many examples of the methods used to catch the attention of the majority of people, and what gets ignored. Berger says “regardless of how plain or boring a product or idea may seem, there are ways to make it contagious…”. The author presents real life examples to illustrate points in order to inform the reader on why things catch on, in a marketing perspective. Berger has studied why things go “viral” and claims that most communications of products are not through the internet, but by word-of-mouth. This book is useful when learning about why some businesses fail and others have booming businesses. It is split up by the acronym STEPPS- Social currency, Triggers, Emotion, Public, Practical value, and Stories, with examples of real businesses in each, which is also useful.
Traditional marketing suggests that the factors that determine a business’ or product’s success are quality, price, and the advertising. Berger explains that it is much deeper than that, and that the more important factors are word-of-mouth transmission and social influence. Word-of-mouth is much more effective because it is persuasive, because people trust more what others recommend rather than what they see on T.V. or social media. This was very interesting to read and I agree with his points- and the numbers prove it accounts for 20-50% of all purchasing decisions. Shockingly, only 7% of word-of-mouth advertising is done through social media.
The author's main arguments are split up by the STEPPS acronym, and each is successfully argued with facts and experience. The first chapter starts with Social currency. This chapter puts emphasis on being “in the know” on something, and wanting to share it with others. The example Berger used was the hot dog restaurant having a secret bar hidden with a secret door in a phone booth. The restaurant and bar have done well for years because people feel like they are “in the know” and recommend it to others, as if they are a part of some big secret. The next chapter, Triggers, is about how one thing triggers another. Such as buying coffee and donuts, peanut butter and jelly, and specifically in the book it is mentioned that the Mars candy company saw a spike in sales during the time in 1997 when NASA was organizing a mission to Mars. Emotion is all about how when something provokes emotion or inspires you, you are more likely to share it. Public is about how people imitate others, with the example of how people are more likely to choose a restaurant or store that has more people in it, and to walk past the ones that are empty. Next, practical value is about how important information is more useful to share, and relies heavily on buyer behavior because people like to help others . Finally, stories explains how a good story is likely to be told especially when it provokes emotion, and thus makes people want to share it with others.
In my opinion, “Contagious: why things catch on” by Jonah Berger is a very interesting read with useful information. As soon as you pick up the book it is difficult to put it down, as it keeps the audience engaged and interested. It is very easy to understand and it allows the reader to put into perspective that marketing is deeper than just advertising on social media. This book could be particularly very useful to students who are interested in studying marketing, interested in psychology and why people are influenced by certain things and not others, or people who have plans to start a business- or just anyone on social media. “Contagious” could even be useful to people who simply do not want to be manipulated by businesses and gain the ability to see through the different marketing strategies. Not only are you given real life scenarios and statistics, but also you are shown proof on how STEPPS can help create a booming business. The stories that are provided are especially useful as they keep the reader engaged while also providing useful information. The only negative of this book I found was the way it is written, as it repeats a lot and could be interpreted as reading a children’s book, and some may get a bit bored. Readers may want to skip over parts as it repeats the same ideas during the chapter and may find it to be a bit redundant at times.
Overall the information is useful enough that I did not mind it too much as I found it just makes it a quick read on why things go viral and how businesses manipulate customers. I enjoyed reading this book, and if you plan on developing a marketing plan or strategy for your business, “Contagious: why things catch on” would be useful to test the strategies to make sure it would be successful. The author successfully explains the STEPPS to making a business successful and used his own education and research to back up the claims being made. The book did not really come off as persuasive, just informative of what works and what does not. I definitely recommend this book to anyone who wants to know more about how marketing strategies work and how companies can manipulate you.
Similar books to “Contagious” include: "Diffusion of Innovations," by Everett Rogers, “Influence” by Robert B. Cialdini, and “The Nuclear Effect” by Scott Oldford. Jonah Berger also has other books that talk about marketing and how to influence other people, such as “The Catalyst” and “Invisible Influence”. Overall, “Contagious” by Jonah Berger is an excellent book to start off with if you want to understand the aspects of marketing and advertising and what can make a company successful, especially when today it is harder than ever to find what will stick to consumers, this book brings about the most effective and prosperous ways on making your product or business contagious.
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14 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Steven R. Shook
3.0 out of 5 starsA Redux of Rogers' "Diffusion of Innovations," Published in 1962
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2018
I'll admit that I enjoyed reading Jonah Berger's "Contagious: Why Things Catch On." As I read it, however, it quickly became quite ironic how similar the concepts and ideas presented were nearly identical to those laid out by the late Everett "Ev" Rogers in his seminal work "Diffusion of Innovations," which was first published in 1962 and is still in print. It seemed that entire chunks of Rogers' work was lifted and repackaged by Berger with contemporary experiments, examples, and a renaming of concepts (e.g., Rogers uses the term Observability, while Berger uses Public). When I reviewed the sources in the Notes section of Berger's "Contagious" book, a citation to Rogers' work was absent.

Interestingly, Berger's academic work cites Rogers' work. In addition, a podcast interview with Berger posted on influencerinc.co notes that one of Berger's "favorite five" is the book "Diffusion of Innovations." In another interview posted on thereadinglists.com, Berger states that "'Diffusion of Innovations' was one of the first books to examine the question of why some products succeed while others fail. The author looked at everything from hybrid corn to new computer technologies." The syllabus for the course taught by Berger for The Great Courses (How Ideas Spread) includes suggested readings; none other than Everett Rogers and his "Diffusion of Innovations" appears on the list.

I earned a PhD in marketing from the University of Washington and my dissertation focused on innovation adoption and diffusion. Before entering academia, I briefly worked as a consultant. I was fortunate enough to have worked along with Rogers on one of my consulting projects with a major packaged foods company. There are simply so many things stated in Berger's book that mirror concepts that Rogers wrote about and talked about in his own work. While "Contagious" is obviously a well written book, anyone interested in the topics Berger presents must read "Diffusion of Innovations," which is far more comprehensive (and interesting) than Berger's work. "Contagious," I believe, is nothing more than a "dumbed-down" version of Rogers' work presented in a way to sell to the masses. Other than the concept of persistence, nearly everything covered by Berger was written by Rogers in 1962.
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From the United States

Jaclyn Ryan
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good read!!
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2020
Verified Purchase
New york time’s best seller, “Contagious: why things catch on”, by Jonah Berger, goes through many examples of the methods used to catch the attention of the majority of people, and what gets ignored. Berger says “regardless of how plain or boring a product or idea may seem, there are ways to make it contagious…”. The author presents real life examples to illustrate points in order to inform the reader on why things catch on, in a marketing perspective. Berger has studied why things go “viral” and claims that most communications of products are not through the internet, but by word-of-mouth. This book is useful when learning about why some businesses fail and others have booming businesses. It is split up by the acronym STEPPS- Social currency, Triggers, Emotion, Public, Practical value, and Stories, with examples of real businesses in each, which is also useful.
Traditional marketing suggests that the factors that determine a business’ or product’s success are quality, price, and the advertising. Berger explains that it is much deeper than that, and that the more important factors are word-of-mouth transmission and social influence. Word-of-mouth is much more effective because it is persuasive, because people trust more what others recommend rather than what they see on T.V. or social media. This was very interesting to read and I agree with his points- and the numbers prove it accounts for 20-50% of all purchasing decisions. Shockingly, only 7% of word-of-mouth advertising is done through social media.
The author's main arguments are split up by the STEPPS acronym, and each is successfully argued with facts and experience. The first chapter starts with Social currency. This chapter puts emphasis on being “in the know” on something, and wanting to share it with others. The example Berger used was the hot dog restaurant having a secret bar hidden with a secret door in a phone booth. The restaurant and bar have done well for years because people feel like they are “in the know” and recommend it to others, as if they are a part of some big secret. The next chapter, Triggers, is about how one thing triggers another. Such as buying coffee and donuts, peanut butter and jelly, and specifically in the book it is mentioned that the Mars candy company saw a spike in sales during the time in 1997 when NASA was organizing a mission to Mars. Emotion is all about how when something provokes emotion or inspires you, you are more likely to share it. Public is about how people imitate others, with the example of how people are more likely to choose a restaurant or store that has more people in it, and to walk past the ones that are empty. Next, practical value is about how important information is more useful to share, and relies heavily on buyer behavior because people like to help others . Finally, stories explains how a good story is likely to be told especially when it provokes emotion, and thus makes people want to share it with others.
In my opinion, “Contagious: why things catch on” by Jonah Berger is a very interesting read with useful information. As soon as you pick up the book it is difficult to put it down, as it keeps the audience engaged and interested. It is very easy to understand and it allows the reader to put into perspective that marketing is deeper than just advertising on social media. This book could be particularly very useful to students who are interested in studying marketing, interested in psychology and why people are influenced by certain things and not others, or people who have plans to start a business- or just anyone on social media. “Contagious” could even be useful to people who simply do not want to be manipulated by businesses and gain the ability to see through the different marketing strategies. Not only are you given real life scenarios and statistics, but also you are shown proof on how STEPPS can help create a booming business. The stories that are provided are especially useful as they keep the reader engaged while also providing useful information. The only negative of this book I found was the way it is written, as it repeats a lot and could be interpreted as reading a children’s book, and some may get a bit bored. Readers may want to skip over parts as it repeats the same ideas during the chapter and may find it to be a bit redundant at times.
Overall the information is useful enough that I did not mind it too much as I found it just makes it a quick read on why things go viral and how businesses manipulate customers. I enjoyed reading this book, and if you plan on developing a marketing plan or strategy for your business, “Contagious: why things catch on” would be useful to test the strategies to make sure it would be successful. The author successfully explains the STEPPS to making a business successful and used his own education and research to back up the claims being made. The book did not really come off as persuasive, just informative of what works and what does not. I definitely recommend this book to anyone who wants to know more about how marketing strategies work and how companies can manipulate you.
Similar books to “Contagious” include: "Diffusion of Innovations," by Everett Rogers, “Influence” by Robert B. Cialdini, and “The Nuclear Effect” by Scott Oldford. Jonah Berger also has other books that talk about marketing and how to influence other people, such as “The Catalyst” and “Invisible Influence”. Overall, “Contagious” by Jonah Berger is an excellent book to start off with if you want to understand the aspects of marketing and advertising and what can make a company successful, especially when today it is harder than ever to find what will stick to consumers, this book brings about the most effective and prosperous ways on making your product or business contagious.
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Ian Mann
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars which you can sell at a great price, throw some advertising at it
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2017
Verified Purchase
Create an exceptional product or service, which you can sell at a great price, throw some advertising at it, and you just have to succeed. Right?
Not even close.
If a fellow foodie raves about a new restaurant you would be more likely to try it than you would if you saw an advert for it. One of the most compelling reasons for trying a different product or service is because someone you trust recommends it to you. Word of mouth is a powerful force.
With the advent of online social media, broadcasting an opinion has never been easier. Vast numbers of friends, and friends of friends, can be reached with little effort. This fact leads to the conclusion that most word of mouth has its origin through this medium.
Research by the Keller Fey Group finds that only 7%, (not 70%, not even 17%,) of word of mouth happens online! The amount of time we spend online might be high, but the amount of time we spend offline is way higher. Even if online does have greater reach, offline conversations have power way beyond the capability of online.
So why are some products, ideas and behaviours talked about more than others?
This is the question that Wharton professor, Jonas Berger, has spent ten years studying and answers in this book. His answers are not speculative or theoretical; rather they are fact based conclusions. From his own research and that of others, Berger has identified a set of six principles which cause products, services and ideas to spread like a virus.
The six principles are: social currency, triggers, emotion, public, practical value and stories. Together the principles form the acronym STEPPS and the more of these that are present, the more likely an idea is to spread.
People don’t share everything with everyone because most ideas are of little interest to them. In the same way that the car we drive and the clothes we wear influences how others perceive us, so does what we talk about. If we want to be seen as sophisticated, contemporary, successful or knowledgeable, we will choose to talk about matters that reflect this.
On the other hand, not to bore people, we choose who to tell what to, and when, in order for the social currency of our content to be most effective.
In New York City there is genuine “old hole-in-the-wall” hot dog restaurant that serves 17 varieties of hot dogs. At the far end of the restaurant is a vintage wooden telephone booth complete with a vintage telephone. Dial 2 and you will be asked, “Do you have a reservation?” If you do, a secret door on the other side of the booth will open and you enter a pub called “Please Don’t Tell.
Reservations to this pub open daily at 3:00 and by 3:30 it is fully booked making it one of the most sort after drinking spots in New York.
Knowing about the pub, and even better, having been there, gives you a social currency that makes you look good in certain groups. That is why you tell others about “Please Don’t Tell.”
Talking about the unusual pub you visited on your last trip to New York will generate interest, but can the mundane do the same? The second principle, the Trigger, shows it can.
In an experiment designed to understand how to change eating behaviour, students were shown one of two slogans: “Live the healthy way, eat five fruits and veggies a day” and “Each and every dining-hall tray needs five fruits and veggies a day.” In all they saw the slogan 20 times in different fonts and colours and were asked to evaluate the slogan they saw.
That trays need fruit and vegetables was rated “corny” and was deemed to be less than half as attractive as the “live healthy” slogan. Additionally, the live healthy was viewed as far more likely to change their behaviour.
Students who saw the “tray” slogan ate 25% more vegetables than the “healthy way” group. The reason is that they use trays to collect their food every day, and the trays acted as a memory trigger.
The slogan “Kit Kat and Coffee” revived the sales of Kit Kat in the US not only because of the memorable alliteration. Kit Kat and coffee do not go better together than Kit Kat and hot milk, but coffee is a more frequently consumed beverage than milk and so provides many more triggers each day for eating a Kit Kat.
Triggers also get us talking about a subject and the more triggers there are, the more we talk.
Clearly, if the subject also has the right amount of the right emotion attached to it, the chances of it being talked about are far higher. If the idea can be translated into something visible and public, it will spread faster. If many people have bought in already, we are more likely to believe it than if few have.
Armstrong’s Livestrong bright yellow rubber wrist bands went viral for exactly this reason – publicly visible support for a good cause – support for cancer sufferers.
Virtually anything can become contagious if the right ingredients are present. The ability to go viral isn’t born, it is made - and this is extremely important news!
Readability Light --+-- Serious
Insights High +---- Low
Practical High +---- Low

Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on leadership and strategy
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Beth
5.0 out of 5 stars A deeply insightful and practical guide to why things go viral
Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2020
Verified Purchase
It’s a bit strange reading a book called Contagious at a time when the COVID-19 virus is in full swing. In my defense, I started reading this book a month ago after hearing Berger, a Professor of Marketing at the University of Pennsylvania, conduct a webinar. Contagious discusses viral marketing and is both insightful and practical at the same time.

Berger shares many examples throughout the book of viral campaigns which made me interrupt my reading to check out some of these examples online. Spoiler alert. Check out Ken Craig’s corn video.

To summarize the key points in the book:

 Any product or behavior can go viral, so there is no excuse that your brand, product or service is just not capable of becoming contagious.
 Next time you think you need to hire a celebrity or social influencer, think again. These people are NOT the reason something goes viral. Berger states, “…social epidemics are driven by the products and ideas themselves.”
 The characteristics that are most likely to cause a product or service to be shared or talked about are captured in Berger’s “STEPPS” acronym.

Social currency - -people like to share things that make them look good (i.e., smart, cool hip)
Triggers – If something is top of mind people will talk about it. Triggers help keep things top of mind. A song called “Friday” gets a lot of airplay on what day? You guessed it – Friday!
Emotion – when we care, we share things with others and when we are “riled up” about something we overshare. How can you get your audience “riled up”?
Public – the product or service must be a public behavior in order to be shared. If your product or service is private (i.e., the toothpaste you use, the pantyhose you wear), you must determine a way to make it public.
Practical Value – people like to help one another. If you have practical information that can help someone, then a person is more willing to share that information, especially when the information is about a narrower topic. Although it is counterintuitive, sharing a narrower topic will be more likely to trigger someone to share information.
Stories – information travels through stories and chit chat, just make sure that the story can’t be told without mentioning the product or service.

Berger has just released another book called The Catalyst which is about getting people to change their minds. Based on how interesting and digestible Contagious is, I can’t wait to read his next book.
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Barbara Skidmore
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Tips for SSM
Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2023
Verified Purchase
I am just getting started in a small business and Social Media Managing. This book had excellent ideas and gave me great ideas to get started.
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George Rodriguez - My Simple Press
4.0 out of 5 stars Contagious Reading Full of Contagious Ideas
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2013
Verified Purchase
What if you had the secret sauce that could make your next campaign go viral? What if you knew the secret to making your content get shared across the internet? What if six basic principles explained everything from Rebecca Black to the power of $100 cheesesteaks?

Wharton Professor Jonah Berger makes some bold claims in his latest book Contagious: Why Things Catch On. But like Malcolm Gladwell and the Heath brothers before him he backs up those claims with enlightening data and cohesive story telling.

WHAT I LOVED ABOUT THE BOOK:

1. Berger makes clear early on in Contagious that "...Facebook and Twitter are technologies, not strategies". This isn't a book based on building followers or getting likes. This is a book with clear, practical and ingenious steps that can make most anything contagious...even blenders.

2. Berger provides an easy way to remember his principles, which means they will stick with the reader long after they have put this book down. They are the "Six Key STEPPS".

Social Currency - we share things that make us look good

Triggers - top of mind, tip of tongue

Emotion - when we care, we share

Public - built to show, built to grow

Practical Value - news you can use

Stories - information travels under the guise of idle chatter

3. Most of the ideas that Berger discusses have two great qualities.

One is the sense that you as the reader could have thought of that. None of the social epidemics Berger highlights seem beyond the creative capacity of you or me.

Two - we can do these things! We can take what Berger has written about so eloquently and use these ideas in our lives and businesses to our benefit.

That is what any great book should do and Berger has written that book.

WHAT I DIDN'T CARE FOR ABOUT THE BOOK:

I can honestly say this is one of the best books I've read in 2013. Berger is to the point, every page offers valuable tips and tactics and when an author is not only intelligent but a great storyteller all you can say is thank you and please write another.

CONCLUSION:

If you are in the business of products, ideas or behaviors and you have a vested interested in making that business ignite social epidemics this is the book that can act as the match to start that fire. I highly recommend this book.
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max
4.0 out of 5 stars Academic
Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2023
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The book delivers on its promise, but it’s too academic in a sense that doesn’t help the reader solve the problem. It’s interesting but fails in effectiveness
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Chandler Ng
4.0 out of 5 stars Easy to read and practical book on Virality
Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2013
Verified Purchase
I recommend that you get a Kindle copy and you could finish the book over the weekend. The central theme is about STEPPS, a six step system that helps to explain why we could create virality or why things go viral. They are: Social currency, Triggers, Emotion, Public, Practical Value and Stories.

The book author got me when he mentioned that only 7% of word of mouth actually happens via online channel, the rest happens via offline. It's true that technology helps us to share things at an unprecedented speed and reach. However Facebook, You Tube or Twitter, they are just technologies, not strategies so unless people want to talk/ share about something, you can't engineer virality just based on the platform alone.

I am actually surprised at first to learn that 50% of all You Tube videos have fewer than five hundred views.

The author argued about the role of the so called "influencers" (the messenger) vs the message (creative idea) in creating virality, of the inherent nature of the message (something funny/cuteness?) etc...

I would not want to spoil your leisure of reading through this wonderful book. So rather than going into too much details, I would list down some of the examples highlighted in this book:

One of the most watched branded You Tube Channel of all time: http://www.youtube.com/blendtec. If you are a marketing director, would you want people to enjoy watching your TVC (yes the TVC) more than 500M times over the years and continue to do so since 2007?
The Story of "Please Don't Tell" bar in New York that never advertised but quickly became one of the most sought out drink reservation in New York since 2007.
"Snapple facts" : why it is to contagious?
The story of Rue La La
New York City Department of Health anti soda campaign
Why Cheerios get more word of mouth than Disney World?

There are many other examples and tips from the book that you need to read them to understand. The good thing about this though is that the author used data to back up his theory, use examples to illustrate his point, which is brilliant.
Doing it this way, he makes everything easy to understand, at the same time convince people easier.
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Jim Williams, Influitive
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating read for marketers trying to unlock the secrets to viral success
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2013
Verified Purchase
Jonah Berger's Contagious is a fascinating read. Not only is the book packed with entertaining examples of viral campaigns, but each is backed with painstaking analysis into the science of social transmission. What you end up with is a veritable blueprint for creating ideas, campaigns and messages that spread like wildfire.
There are six essential factors that contribute to contagious ideas, shows Jonah, and a quick look at some of the most successful viral campaigns reveals each of them at work:

Social currency. We share things that make us look good or help us compare favorably to others. Exclusive restaurants utilize social currency all the time to create demand.

Triggers. Ideas that are top of mind spread. Like parasites, viral ideas attach themselves to top of mind stories, occurrences or environments. For example, Mars bar sales spiked when in 1997 when NASA's Pathfinder mission explored the red planet.

Emotion. When we care, we share. Jonah analyzed over six months of data from the New York Times most emailed list to discover that certain high arousal emotions can dramatically increase our need to share ideas - like the outrage triggered by Dave Carroll's "United Breaks Guitars" video.

Public. People tend to follow others, but only when they can see what those others are doing. There is a reason why baristas put money in their own tip jar at the beginning of a shift. Ideas need to be public to be copied.

Practical. Humans crave the opportunity to give advice and offer tips (one reason why advocate marketing works - your best customers love to help out), but especially if they offer practical value. It's why we `pay it forward' and help others. Sharing is caring.

Stories - People do not just share information, they tell stories. And stories are like Trojan horses, vessels that carry ideas, brands, and information. To benefit the brand, stories must not only be shared but also relate to a sponsoring company's products. Thus the epic failure of viral sensations like Evian's roller baby video (50M views) that did little to stem Evian's 25% drop in sales.

There is so much this book offers marketers, making it required reading that follows in the footsteps of Malcolm Gladwell and the Heath brothers. It also perfectly demonstrates why advocate marketing is such a powerful idea for modern marketers. Viral campaigns eschew overt marketing messages by cleverly tapping into consumer wants, desires and emotional needs. Similarly, advocate marketing helps marketers reach audiences through a more effective and trusted means than direct messaging. We share our experiences because that act enhances our personal and professional reputation and makes us feel good. When marketers tap into these very human needs, they can reach a much broader audience with a more genuine message than any advertisement can provide.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Argument in Favor of Self-Interest
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2023
Verified Purchase
This book is a great argument for the theory that we always act with self-interest in mind, because that’s how we are made. The irony is that the author would most likely disagree with this theory—a possibility based upon my reading of this book—while his work, through its research and storytelling, sublimates it, while simultaneously denying it. The author’s notion of cachet, even by itself, is suggestive. We do what we do for ourselves, to satisfy some desire, urge, or need within. Marketers who recognize this and appeal to it are far more likely to succeed than those who don’t. It’s neither good nor evil; it is, and that’s that. Appeal to it to succeed. Ignore it and be mediocre.
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Kindle Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Easy and interesting read
Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2023
Verified Purchase
Loved the fact that each chapter focuses on exactly one of the core principles that the author wants to share. There are a lot of examples give in each chapter. Although interesting, at times, they can distract from the core idea. But this gets corrected in the summary at the end of each chapter, which is nice.
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