Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts

Gen BuY: How Tweens, Teens and Twenty-Somethings Are Revolutionizing Retail Review

Gen BuY: How Tweens, Teens and Twenty-Somethings Are Revolutionizing Retail
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I bought Gen BuY to learn more about why my teenagers and their friends are so into shopping and what retailers are doing to try to get them to buy things. It's so much more than that. This is one of the best books on the psychology of today's teenagers that I've ever read. It's not only deep, it's clever and funny too. I highly recommend it anyone who wants to know more about the psychology of shopping, today's teenagers or what retailers do to get them to spend money. learned a lot about my teen by reading this book!



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Wild West 2.0: How to Protect and Restore Your Reputation on the Untamed Social Frontier Review

Wild West 2.0: How to Protect and Restore Your Reputation on the Untamed Social Frontier
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This book makes a pretty compelling argument that, for better or for worse, your online reputation IS your reputation. And with rapidly advancing technologies, Web 2.0 has put everyone's reputation on the line. Fertik and Thompson provide some sobering details about current risks to your online persona and the legal and technical reasons underlying these vulnerabilities. They then present a clear, step by step plan to take control of your online identity and protect yourself from attacks. If you've been the subject of an online smear, you obviously need this book. But even if you haven't, an understanding of how to take control over the image you present to the world is essential. I've seen a lot of books dealing with computer safety, but Wild West 2.0 provides a much-needed guide to keeping yourself safe as well.

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Spend Shift: How the Post-Crisis Values Revolution Is Changing the Way We Buy, Sell, and Live Review

Spend Shift: How the Post-Crisis Values Revolution Is Changing the Way We Buy, Sell, and Live
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Spend Shift described a hopeful scenario for America as it emerges from the Great Recession. Over the past two years the cavalcade of bad news on the economy and the state of our union economically and socially has been non-stop. In particular, this notion of the New Normal described by some of the savvier investing minds out there has given me the impression that we are a country in decline. What Spend Shift revealed was that the apparent decline was simply a re-shuffling of priorities and a re-engineering of business to align with those priorities. Rather than declining America was simply establishing a foundation for growth for the decades to come.
I did not purchase Spend Shift to be inspired, but rather to understand resonant marketing themes that I might tap into as I start my own business. However, I came away inspired by the entrepreneurs who were taking the risks and connecting with customers and building sustainable businesses by understanding that customers were connecting their product choices to their values. It is stunning to read about these success stories during one of the worst economic periods in economic history. It was also fun to discover businesses like Brooklyn Brin (based in the city that I call home) that I had never heard about and now feel compelled to patronize.
I came to Spend Shift thinking I would learn a thing or two about marketing in the recession and I left Spend Shift having learned that America can go on and in fact can thrive during a time of massive deleveraging. Spend Shift had the requisite marketing lessons, but it was the narrative style and inspiring examples that lead me to rate this a 5.

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The Influentials: One American in Ten Tells the Other Nine How to Vote, Where to Eat, and What to Buy Review

The Influentials: One American in Ten Tells the Other Nine How to Vote, Where to Eat, and What to Buy
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For one simple, powerful reason THE INFLUENTIALS stands head and shoulders above the field in the marketing trends book sweepstakes. Its insights are based on data, long-term empirical data, judiciously considered. Facts. Numbers. A real departure from most books about the American consumer which base their hypotheses, and thus their recommendations, on anecdotes, renovated B-school doctrine, all plumped up with a few chunks of data culled willy nilly from any variety of sources. (Has anybody else noticed that the same warmed-over statistics show up again and again in the most marketing books? Shall we blame the Internet and Lexis/Nexis searches for this sudden homogeneity?). THE INFLUENTIALS, on the other hand, shares primary research data on the American consumer going back 30 years or more. Berry's and Keller's insights and recommendations are shaped by the evolving opinions of Americans. The horse is before the cart where the horse belongs.
Interspersed with the data and trend analysis, Berry and Keller introduce in mini-bios to actual Influentials. These particularly well-written sections serve to embody the data, (the data sections can get a little overwhelming at times) and show us how an Influential lives, thinks and leads. Most are local community leaders, or have real involvement in their communities, and and as such are the nodes of wide personal networks. They are the people who get things done, the people to whom others look to for advice or counsel. By the way, over the years, about 10% of Americans have ?qualified? by their behavior to be counted as Influentials. The definition of an Influential is based on a question about people's political and other civic behavior that Roper has been asking since the 1920s, and has been updating ever since to reflect changing times.
Now it could be argued that the Roper definition of what constitutes an influential American is antiquated, no longer applicable in the post-modern era. For instance it could be said that the influence of super-empowered individuals (to use Thomas Friedman's term) has been magnified in our hypermediated age to such an extent that "celebrities" now have exponentially more sway over how we choose to think, to live, to dream than any local influential. A good point, but Keller and Berry do not reject the influence of the celebrity and celebrity brand culture. They answer that that Roper Influentials are not only leaders in the sense that others look to them for political or community leadership, but that non-Influentials also look to them for guidance on most consumer goods and entertainment because Influentials also tend to be early adopters of new goods, services and culture. In other words, Influentials serve as an early warning system for those trends that other Americans will get to a six months to a year or so later.
What's really impressive about THE INFLUENTIALS is that Berry and Keller share so much data. That runs counter to another kind of marketing book that readers in this field will recognize -- the marketing books as "teaser." In this type of marketing trends book, the reader is told that the insights offered in the books are based on years of trend data, presumably similar to that found in THE INFLUENTIALS. This type of marketing trends book then indicates that the real information is only available to the clients of the writers. They go on to cite case studies where organizations have used the data to effect stellar marketing programs and boost profit. In other words, now you?ve got to buy their consulting services to get the real information and the real help you need. In THE INFLUENTIALS, it's all there - sometimes actually too much is there - but that's certainly better than books that are empty shells, "door openers" for standard consulting services.
All in all a solid, well-conceived, time-tested and amply proven marketing paradigm. A rare treat.

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Brand New Emily Review

Brand New Emily
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Finally! Teen fiction that's smart and funny. Beyond a great storyline, Brand New Emily offers a searingly honest take on the power of fitting in and finding yourself--and how those two very important parts of growing up are sometimes at odds with each other.
Emily is the character we recognize and admire--even when she's less than perfect, and possibly because she is.
You can tell the author has plenty of experience with the target market. Rue has produced a story that's authentic and compelling. Great gift for tweens because it addresses a lot of key behaviors without being preachy. I've read it a couple of times and I get something new every time.

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