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Rules For Revolutionaries: The Capitalist Manifesto for Creating and Marketing New Products and Services
A Favourite of 1, Read by 3, Owned by 5, Reviewed by 1, | Quotes 13
Amazon Description:
Guy Kawasaki, former chief evangelist at Apple Computer and an iconoclastic corporate tactician who now works with high-tech startups in Silicon Valley, is back in print with his seventh book: Rules for Revolutionaries: The Capitalist Manifesto for Creating and Marketing New Products and Services. Entertainingly written in collaboration with previous coauthor Michele Moreno, it lays out Kawasaki's decidedly audacious (but personally experienced) strategies for besting the competition and triumphing in today's hypercharged business environment. The book is divided into three sections, whose titles alone epitomize its thrust and tone. The first, "Create Like a God," discusses the way that radical new products and services must really be developed. The second, "Command Like a King," explains why take-charge leaders are truly necessary in order for such developments to succeed. And the third, "Work Like a Slave," focuses on the commitment that is actually required to beat the odds and change the world. A concluding section is filled with entertaining and inspirational quotes on topics like technology, transportation, politics, entertainment, and medicine that show how even some of our era's most successful ideas and people--the telephone, Louis Pasteur, and Yahoo! among them--have prevailed despite the scoffing of naysayers. --Howard Rothman


Added on: Sunday, July 23 2006
Recent Reviews:
Revolutionary Business

Looking to change the world with a revolutionary company? Tap into the wisdom of Kawasaki, Apple computers former Chief Evangelist and brilliant strategist. Funny and brilliant.

Methinks you'll dig it.

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Recent Quotes:

Catalyze a Virtual Community

Many companies think that building a virtual community is as simple as throwing up a cool Web site that compels people to visit every day. Dream on. These sites are commercials, not communities. If you want to build a virtual community, here are the principles to implement:

Community before commerce. In the words of John Hagel III and Arthur G. Armstrong (authors of Net.Gain), “put community before commerce.” That is, the purpose of these efforts is to build a community, not sell more stuff, so cool it on the commercialism. The community exists for its own benefit, not yours.

Communication comes next. Build in the capability for people to communicate with each other via message boards and Internet mail lists. Peer-to-peer communication is more important than being able to communicate with the company. You're hosting the event, but it's a cocktail party, not a lecture.

Place the community's interests above your own. The big picture is that a vibrant community will help you, but getting to this place means sacrificing short-term interests. For example, people should be able to freely discuss and endorse competitive products.

Tolerate criticism. Not only should peple feel free to plug competitive products, they should be able to criticize your own. This freedom produces two desirable results: first, good public relations because tolerating criticism on a company-sponsored site is unheard of; second, free and voluminous customer feedback.

Encourage “personalities.” Remember how one of the keys to the success of MTV was veejays with an attitude? The same is true of a Web site, so encourage your employees to develop online personalities to show that corporate thought police don't control your site.

If someone tells you like you eat like a bird, the implication is that you don't eat much. Yet for their body weight, birds eat a lot. The peripatetic hummingbird, for example, eats the equivalent of 50 percent of its weight every day. (If you're a 200-pound male, imagine eating 100 pounds of food every day!)

Chances are no one will tell you that you poop like an elephant because elephants poop 165 pounds per day. So far you're probably thinking, “Guy is into the weirdest things. No wonder Apple had so many problems.” However, there two are messages for revolutionaries in these biological facts.

First, a successful revolutionary relentlessly searches for, consumes, and absorbs knowledge, about the industry , customers, and competition. You do this by pressing the flesh of your customers, attending seminars and trade shows, reading journals, and browsing the internet.

Second, you need to spread the large amount of information knowledge that you've gained–pooping like an elephant. This means sharing information and discoveries with your fellow employees and occasionally even with your competitors.



This book club has 10 members
Brian : PhilosophersNotes.com
PhilosophersNotes.com
~C4Chaos : (hyper)linker
(hyper)linker
metaphysicalbiz : Marketing Strategist & Writer
Marketing Strategist & Writer
Sophie : Wisdomseeker
Wisdomseeker
Rebecca : Human Becoming
Human Becoming
Rebel : Rebel Holiday
Rebel Holiday
Joshua : Code Poet
Code Poet
Ryan : Earthling
Earthling
~KES : Communicator
Communicator
Samme : ♥intends♥
♥intends♥


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