• Home
Comments RSS Full RSS

Search this blog. Type any keyword

The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger

  • Filed under: Recommended

The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger

Editorial Reviews

How would you classify a book that begins with the salutation, “People of Earth…”? While the captains of industry might dismiss it as mere science fiction, The Cluetrain Manifesto is definitely of this day and age. Aiming squarely at the solar plexus of corporate America, authors Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, and David Weinberger show how the Internet is turning business upside down. They proclaim that, thanks to conversations taking place on Web sites and message boards, and in e-mail and chat rooms, employees and customers alike have found voices that undermine the traditional command-and-control hierarchy that organizes most corporate marketing groups. “Markets are conversations,” the authors write, and those conversations are “getting smarter faster than most companies.” In their view, the lowly customer service rep wields far more power and influence in today’s marketplace than the well-oiled front office PR machine.

The Cluetrain Manifesto began as a Web site (www.cluetrain.com) in 1999 when the authors, who have worked variously at IBM, Sun Microsystems, the Linux Journal, and NPR, posted 95 theses that pronounced what they felt was the new reality of the networked marketplace. For example, thesis no.2: “Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors”; thesis no.20: “Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them”; thesis no.62: “Markets do not want to talk to flacks and hucksters. They want to participate in the conversations going on behind the corporate firewall”; thesis no.74: “We are immune to advertising. Just forget it.” The book enlarges on these themes through seven essays filled with dozens of stories and observations about how business gets done in America and how the Internet will change it all. While Cluetrain will strike many as loud and over the top, the message itself remains quite relevant and unique. This book is for anyone interested in the Internet and e-commerce, and is especially important for those businesses struggling to navigate the topography of the wired marketplace. All aboard! –Harry C. Edwards
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly
Experienced technology users with a history of communicating over the Web, Levine (Sun Guide to Webstyle), Locke (who has worked for MCI and IBM and written for such publications as Forbes), Searls (a senior editor at Linux Journal) and Weinberger (a regular commentator on NPR) want nothing less than to change the way the world does business. Commerce, they argue, should not be about transactions, it should be about conversations, no matter what the medium. The artifice that frequently accompanies buying and selling should be replaced by a genuine attempt to satisfy the needs, wants and desires of the people on both sides of the equation. Despite their long digressions, the authors occasionally succeed in making solid, clever points that reveal fundamental flaws in the structure of traditional businesses. Consider this comment about business hierarchies: “First they assume–along with Ayn Rand and poorly socialized adolescents–that the fundamental unit of life is the individual. This despite the evidence of our senses that individuals only emerge from groups.” So far so good. But their apparent assumption that everyone in upper management, along with anyone who does not embrace every aspect of their utopian ideal, is a dolt may not be the best way to raise an army in support of their cause. Similarly, ignoring examples of companies that are already doing business differently–the magazines Inc. and Fast Company are filled with examples every month–and glossing over the specifics on how to implement their business model undercuts their credibility. (Feb.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Order The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger form Amazon.

  • 0 Comments

  • Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    Editorial Reviews


    Editorial Reviews
    Amazon.com
    About the Authors:

    Robert Scoble helps run Microsoft’s Channel 9 Web site. He began his blog in 2000 and now has more than 3.5 million readers every year. Scoble’s blog has earned acclaim in Fortune magazine, Fast Company, and The Economist.

    Shel Israel played a key strategic role in introducing some of technology’s most successful products, including PowerPoint, FileMaker, and Sun Microsystems workstations.He’s been an expert on innovation for more than twenty years.

    An Excerpt from Naked Conversations:

    Bloggings’s Six Pillars: There are six key differences between blogging and any other communications channel. You can find any of them elsewhere. These are the Six Pillars of Blogging:

    1.Publishable.Anyone can publish a blog.You can do it cheaply and post often. Each posting is instantly available worldwide.

    2.Findable. Through search engines, people will find blogs by subject, by author, or both. The more you post, the more findable you become.

    3.Social. The blogosphere is one big conversation. Interesting topical conversations move from site to site, linking to each other. Through blogs, people with shared interests build relationships unrestricted by geographic borders.

    4.Viral. Information often spreads faster through blogs than via a newsservice. No form of viral marketing matches the speed and efficiency of a blog.

    5.Syndicatable. By clicking on an icon, you can get free “home delivery” of RSS- enabled blogs into your e-mail software. RSS lets you know when a blog you subscribe to is updated, saving you search time. This process is considerably more efficient than the last- generation method of visiting one page of one web site at a time looking for changes.

    6.Linkable. Because each blog can link to all others, every blogger has access to the tens of millions of people who visit the blogosphere every day.

    You can find each of these elements elsewhere. None is, in itself, all that remarkable. But in final assembly, they are the benefits of the most powerful two-way Internet communications tool so far developed.

    Other Blogging Books

    Blogging For Dummies Buzz Marketing with Blogs For Dummies Publishing a Blog with Blogger


    From Publishers Weekly
    For the past five years, Microsoft employee Scoble has maintained one of the most popular blogs on the Internet. Mixing personal notes with passionate, often-controversial commentary on technology and business, his blog is “naked”—i.e., not filtered through his employer’s marketing or public relations department—a key part of its appeal. In this breezy book, Scoble and coauthor Israel argue that every business can benefit from smart “naked” blogging, whether the company’s a smalltown plumbing operation or a multinational fashion house. “If you ignore the blogosphere… you won’t know what people are saying about you,” they write. “You can’t learn from them, and they won’t come to see you as a sincere human who cares about your business and its reputation.” To bolster their argument, Scoble and Israel have assembled an enormous amount of information about blogging: from history and theory to comparisons among countries and industries. They also lay out the dos and don’ts of the medium and include extensive statistics, dozens of case studies and several interviews with famous bloggers. They consider the darker aspects of blogging as well—including the possibility of getting fired by an unsympathetic employer. For companies that have already embraced blogging, this book is an essential guide to best practice. (Feb.)
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    See all Editorial Reviews

    order Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel now and save money!

  • 0 Comments

  • Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    Editorial Reviews

    Amazon.com


    Editorial Reviews
    Amazon.com
    About the Authors:

    Robert Scoble helps run Microsoft’s Channel 9 Web site. He began his blog in 2000 and now has more than 3.5 million readers every year. Scoble’s blog has earned acclaim in Fortune magazine, Fast Company, and The Economist.

    Shel Israel played a key strategic role in introducing some of technology’s most successful products, including PowerPoint, FileMaker, and Sun Microsystems workstations.He’s been an expert on innovation for more than twenty years.

    An Excerpt from Naked Conversations:

    Bloggings’s Six Pillars: There are six key differences between blogging and any other communications channel. You can find any of them elsewhere. These are the Six Pillars of Blogging:

    1.Publishable.Anyone can publish a blog.You can do it cheaply and post often. Each posting is instantly available worldwide.

    2.Findable. Through search engines, people will find blogs by subject, by author, or both. The more you post, the more findable you become.

    3.Social. The blogosphere is one big conversation. Interesting topical conversations move from site to site, linking to each other. Through blogs, people with shared interests build relationships unrestricted by geographic borders.

    4.Viral. Information often spreads faster through blogs than via a newsservice. No form of viral marketing matches the speed and efficiency of a blog.

    5.Syndicatable. By clicking on an icon, you can get free “home delivery” of RSS- enabled blogs into your e-mail software. RSS lets you know when a blog you subscribe to is updated, saving you search time. This process is considerably more efficient than the last- generation method of visiting one page of one web site at a time looking for changes.

    6.Linkable. Because each blog can link to all others, every blogger has access to the tens of millions of people who visit the blogosphere every day.

    You can find each of these elements elsewhere. None is, in itself, all that remarkable. But in final assembly, they are the benefits of the most powerful two-way Internet communications tool so far developed.

    Other Blogging Books

    Blogging For Dummies Buzz Marketing with Blogs For Dummies Publishing a Blog with Blogger


    From Publishers Weekly
    For the past five years, Microsoft employee Scoble has maintained one of the most popular blogs on the Internet. Mixing personal notes with passionate, often-controversial commentary on technology and business, his blog is “naked”—i.e., not filtered through his employer’s marketing or public relations department—a key part of its appeal. In this breezy book, Scoble and coauthor Israel argue that every business can benefit from smart “naked” blogging, whether the company’s a smalltown plumbing operation or a multinational fashion house. “If you ignore the blogosphere… you won’t know what people are saying about you,” they write. “You can’t learn from them, and they won’t come to see you as a sincere human who cares about your business and its reputation.” To bolster their argument, Scoble and Israel have assembled an enormous amount of information about blogging: from history and theory to comparisons among countries and industries. They also lay out the dos and don’ts of the medium and include extensive statistics, dozens of case studies and several interviews with famous bloggers. They consider the darker aspects of blogging as well—including the possibility of getting fired by an unsympathetic employer. For companies that have already embraced blogging, this book is an essential guide to best practice. (Feb.)
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    $Order From Amazon and save money$

  • 0 Comments

  • The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger

    • Filed under: Recommended

    The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, David Weinberger

    Editorial Reviews

    Amazon.com Reviews
    How would you classify a book that begins with the salutation, “People of Earth…”? While the captains of industry might dismiss it as mere science fiction, The Cluetrain Manifesto is definitely of this day and age. Aiming squarely at the solar plexus of corporate America, authors Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, and David Weinberger show how the Internet is turning business upside down. They proclaim that, thanks to conversations taking place on Web sites and message boards, and in e-mail and chat rooms, employees and customers alike have found voices that undermine the traditional command-and-control hierarchy that organizes most corporate marketing groups. “Markets are conversations,” the authors write, and those conversations are “getting smarter faster than most companies.” In their view, the lowly customer service rep wields far more power and influence in today’s marketplace than the well-oiled front office PR machine.

    The Cluetrain Manifesto began as a Web site (www.cluetrain.com) in 1999 when the authors, who have worked variously at IBM, Sun Microsystems, the Linux Journal, and NPR, posted 95 theses that pronounced what they felt was the new reality of the networked marketplace. For example, thesis no. 2: “Markets consist of human beings, not demographic sectors”; thesis no. 20: “Companies need to realize their markets are often laughing. At them”; thesis no. 62: “Markets do not want to talk to flacks and hucksters. They want to participate in the conversations going on behind the corporate firewall”; thesis no. 74: “We are immune to advertising. Just forget it.” The book enlarges on these themes through seven essays filled with dozens of stories and observations about how business gets done in America and how the Internet will change it all. While Cluetrain will strike many as loud and over the top, the message itself remains quite relevant and unique. This book is for anyone interested in the Internet and e-commerce, and is especially important for those businesses struggling to navigate the topography of the wired marketplace. All aboard! –Harry C. Edwards
    –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    From Publishers Weekly
    Experienced technology users with a history of communicating over the Web, Levine (Sun Guide to Webstyle), Locke (who has worked for MCI and IBM and written for such publications as Forbes), Searls (a senior editor at Linux Journal) and Weinberger (a regular commentator on NPR) want nothing less than to change the way the world does business. Commerce, they argue, should not be about transactions, it should be about conversations, no matter what the medium. The artifice that frequently accompanies buying and selling should be replaced by a genuine attempt to satisfy the needs, wants and desires of the people on both sides of the equation. Despite their long digressions, the authors occasionally succeed in making solid, clever points that reveal fundamental flaws in the structure of traditional businesses. Consider this comment about business hierarchies: “First they assume–along with Ayn Rand and poorly socialized adolescents–that the fundamental unit of life is the individual. This despite the evidence of our senses that individuals only emerge from groups.” So far so good. But their apparent assumption that everyone in upper management, along with anyone who does not embrace every aspect of their utopian ideal, is a dolt may not be the best way to raise an army in support of their cause. Similarly, ignoring examples of companies that are already doing business differently–the magazines Inc. and Fast Company are filled with examples every month–and glossing over the specifics on how to implement their business model undercuts their credibility. (Feb.)
    Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
    –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    See all Editorial Reviews

    See all Editorial Reviews&order

  • 0 Comments

  • Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    • Filed under: Recommended

    Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers: Robert Scoble, Shel Israel

    Editorial Reviews

    Amazon.com


    Editorial Reviews
    Amazon.com
    About the Authors:

    Robert Scoble helps run Microsoft’s Channel 9 Web site. He began his blog in 2000 and now has more than 3.5 million readers every year. Scoble’s blog has earned acclaim in Fortune magazine, Fast Company, and The Economist.

    Shel Israel played a key strategic role in introducing some of technology’s most successful products, including PowerPoint, FileMaker, and Sun Microsystems workstations.He’s been an expert on innovation for more than twenty years.

    An Excerpt from Naked Conversations:

    Bloggings’s Six Pillars: There are six key differences between blogging and any other communications channel. You can find any of them elsewhere. These are the Six Pillars of Blogging:

    1.Publishable.Anyone can publish a blog.You can do it cheaply and post often. Each posting is instantly available worldwide.

    2.Findable. Through search engines, people will find blogs by subject, by author, or both. The more you post, the more findable you become.

    3.Social. The blogosphere is one big conversation. Interesting topical conversations move from site to site, linking to each other. Through blogs, people with shared interests build relationships unrestricted by geographic borders.

    4.Viral. Information often spreads faster through blogs than via a newsservice. No form of viral marketing matches the speed and efficiency of a blog.

    5.Syndicatable. By clicking on an icon, you can get free “home delivery” of RSS- enabled blogs into your e-mail software. RSS lets you know when a blog you subscribe to is updated, saving you search time. This process is considerably more efficient than the last- generation method of visiting one page of one web site at a time looking for changes.

    6.Linkable. Because each blog can link to all others, every blogger has access to the tens of millions of people who visit the blogosphere every day.

    You can find each of these elements elsewhere. None is, in itself, all that remarkable. But in final assembly, they are the benefits of the most powerful two-way Internet communications tool so far developed.

    Other Blogging Books

    Blogging For Dummies Buzz Marketing with Blogs For Dummies Publishing a Blog with Blogger


    From Publishers Weekly
    For the past five years, Microsoft employee Scoble has maintained one of the most popular blogs on the Internet. Mixing personal notes with passionate, often-controversial commentary on technology and business, his blog is “naked”—i.e., not filtered through his employer’s marketing or public relations department—a key part of its appeal. In this breezy book, Scoble and coauthor Israel argue that every business can benefit from smart “naked” blogging, whether the company’s a smalltown plumbing operation or a multinational fashion house. “If you ignore the blogosphere… you won’t know what people are saying about you,” they write. “You can’t learn from them, and they won’t come to see you as a sincere human who cares about your business and its reputation.” To bolster their argument, Scoble and Israel have assembled an enormous amount of information about blogging: from history and theory to comparisons among countries and industries. They also lay out the dos and don’ts of the medium and include extensive statistics, dozens of case studies and several interviews with famous bloggers. They consider the darker aspects of blogging as well—including the possibility of getting fired by an unsympathetic employer. For companies that have already embraced blogging, this book is an essential guide to best practice. (Feb.)
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    See all Editorial Reviews

    See all Editorial Reviews&order

  • 0 Comments

  • Simple Team Collaboration - Free Trial

    Categories

    • Business
      • Promotion
    • Make money Books
    • Money Matters
    • news
    • Recommended

    Archives

    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • June 2008

    Blogroll

    • luxury watches
    • laptops reviews
    • Danny DeMichele
    • finance business
    Site Build It!

    Recent News

  • Your Money and Your Brain: How the New Science of Neuroeconomics Can Help Make You Rich (9780743276689): Jason Zweig
  • How to Make Money Selling Facts: to Non-Traditional Markets (9780595278428): Anne Hart
  • Making Dreams Come True without Money, Might or Miracles: A Guide for Dream-Chasers and Dream-Catchers (9780940576230): Ivan H. Scheier
  • The Ebay Business Handbook: How Anyone Can Build a Business and Make Money on eBay (9781906659035): Robert Pugh
  • How to Make Money with S&P Options: Using Grandmill's Option Tables (9780930233402): William Grandmill
  • The Economic Storm: Understand It, Survive It, Make Money When It Passes (Trade Secrets (Marketplace Books)) (9781592803804): Lane Mendelsohn
  • How To Make Money Speaking (9780882891729): John Frasca
  • Cool Jobs for College:The Smart Way to Make Money for College and Build Your Resume (A Guide to Part-time Jobs You Never Knew Existed) (9780979381812): David A. Stafford
  • Where the Money Is: How to Spot Key Trends to Make Investment Profits (9780471393177): Bob Froehlich, Suze Orman
  • 30 Day Money Master Mind Make-Over (Black & White Edition) (9781427639820): Karen Monroy, Caron Frost Olmsted
  • Most Commented

  • The United States of Wal-Mart: John Dicker (2)
  • Job Analysis: Methods, Research, and Applications for Human Resource Management in the New Millennium: Michael T. Brannick, Edward L. Levine (2)
  • Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning: Henry Mintzberg (2)
  • The Leisure Economy: How Changing Demographics, Economics, and Generational Attitudes Will Reshape Our Lives and Our Industries: Linda Nazareth (2)
  • America's Financial Apocalypse: How to Profit from the Next Great Depression (Condensed Edition): Stathis (2)
  • The Ultimate Lead Generation Plan: Matt Bacak, Mike Litman (1)
  • Real You Incorporated: 8 Essentials for Women Entrepreneurs: Kaira Sturdivant Rouda (1)
  • Training Within Industry: The Foundation Of Lean: Donald A. Dinero (1)
  • Fish! Tales: Real-Life Stories to Help You Transform Your Workplace and Your Life: Stephen C. Lundin, Harry Paul, John Christensen, Philip Strand (1)
  • Managing Change in a Unionized Workplace: Countervailing Collaboration: Kirk Blackard (1)
  • Social Network

  • Subscribes to feed
  • Stumble this site main post
  • Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Copywrite

    This blog is copyrighted - © 2007
    To Make Money Myself
    Wordpress theme by Acosmin
    Theme created for TMZ.ro