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What Would Google Do?

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

"Eye-opening, thought-provoking, and enlightening."--USA Today"An indispensable guide to the business logic of the networked era."--Clay Shirky, author of Here Comes Everybody"A stimulating exercise... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

a job well done trying to make sense of the changing world

... However only the history will judge the accuracy of the predictions and usefulness of the prescriptions offered by Jeff. This is a nice book! Jeff is using the tremendous success of Google to extract several lessons for many types of companies and social forms of organization. This approach risks misattributing the causes of success (e.g., just because Google is successful - not everything it does inevitably and automatically brings success). However, a thoughtful reader and a critical thinker should be able to make her own judgments on that. I'm a communication/new media researcher and found many sections in the book to be of great interest (e.g., "googlification" of universities, mass media, government, etc.). Many ideas do sound extreme and radical. But, then again, Jeff is a revolutionary thinker - his ideas should sound like that. Plus, this stirs imagination - and this is good. I'd say this book is a must for anyone trying to understand where the communication world is (or might be) headed. Even, if some ideas sound too radical or untenable or hard to swallow - the vast majority of the volume is quite thoughtful and thought-provoking, and therefore, very well worth your money and time.

Game Changer!

I love this book! it has absolutely changed the way that I view my own business and how I will shape our future direction. Jeff has written a true game changing book and I highly recommend this book to any business manager, executive, small business owner, student.... etc. Anyone who is open to how business is evolving now and how it will look in the not too distant future. Well done Jeff! I can not wait for more....

Valuable Ideas, Highly Recommended

There are a good number of books out on the way of the web, how web thinking works, how it's applied and how it is changing the way we do business and even relate to each other. Jeff Jarvis does an exceptionally comprehensive and clear job describing these ideas. While the title is about Google, and much of the book characterizes the models, approaches, philosophies and strategies of Google, Jarvis also discusses other major movers and shakers on the web, using examples that demonstrate the way things are being done. If you are in business- on the web or off, the ideas Jarvis describes can help you. If you are a web entrepreneur or in some way dealing with getting your company on the web, this book is an excellent one that sums up many of the ideas of its predecessors on the crowd, wikis, etc. Besides providing a lot of useful information, Jarvis describes the ideas, processes, approaches, etc. in readable language you don't have to be a technogeek to understand.

Get ready to take notes, it's packed with info

I read two to three books a week. That's gone on for the last 20-plus years. It's past being a habit. I do work, but I simply must have my reading time to sleep. So...when I got out of bed, grabbed a notebook and a pen, I knew something was different. I haven't taken so many notes from a book since college. That is not hype! I was overwhelmed with VERY practical information on using the internet for business. Every page hit me with a new concept that I doubt I ever would have encountered outside this book. I am currently writing a business plan and am using the SBA folks to help me. THEY didn't even come close to presenting me with this much material. I guess someone could argue that it is "too" packed. Too much information to be useful. The counter-argument is: It's a book. You can put it down and rest. You don't have to digest it in one browsing session during your lunch break. The pun on WWJD aside (and so, the feelings of those who may find this title mocking), WWGD is outstanding. It is well-written. It reads like a novel. It's not for the beginner, but doesn't over-complicate matters. It's overwhelming, but at the same time, indescribably and somehow, not overwhelming. Jeff Jarvis (and I'm sure his editors) have done an amazing job at communicating some really great business concepts using mostly free tools/ideas. Superb!

If there is one non-fiction book you plan to read this year, this should be the one

A few weeks ago I received a pre-galley copy of Jeff Jarvis upcoming book What Would Google Do? Judging from the title you might think this is just another book about Google, but it isn't. It's a book about seeing the world as Google sees it. What Jarvis did is translating Google's way of doing business into a set of rules to live and do business by. I loved the book, not only because it's a highly entertaining read filled with real life examples, but especially because I think it will open the eyes of many people about how the world has changed because of the Internet, and what they should do to stay ahead or at least keep up. Many of the Google Rules that Jarvis defines are very recognizable to me and several have helped me to grow my businesses over the past years. But others I did not really think through yet, so they were quite thought provoking while reading the book. The first part of the book is about the Google Rules, the way Google does its business, about 30 in total. Some of the most important include: - Jeff Jarvis First Law: Give the people trust and we will use it. Don't and you will lose it. The powerful (companies, institutions and governments) used to be in charge because of the control they had, but the world has changed. They can only win it back by being more transparent and listen to their customers - Your customer is your advertising agency: Google spends next to nothing in advertising, people spread the word for them. Let your customers do that for you. - Join the Open Source, Gift Economy: Your customers will help you if you ask them, people like to be generous (look at Wikipedia for example) - The masses are dead, long live the niches: Aggregation of the long tail replaces the mass. Not one online video will have the ratings of the Superbowl, but together they capture a huge audience - Free is a business model: Google will find ways to make money by offering services for free. Charging money costs money - Make mistakes well: It can be a good thing to make mistakes, but it depends on how you handle them. Corrections enhance credibility. You don't need to launch the perfect product, your customers can (and will) help you to improve it - Beware of the cash cow in the coal mine: Cash flow can blind you to the strategic necessity of change, tough decisions and innovations These rules will change the way you will do business. And not just for obvious industries like the Internet or traditional media. In the second part of the book, If Google Ruled The World, Jarvis describes the impact on (or better: opportunities for) many different industries. From media to advertising, from retail to manufacturing, and from the service industry to banking and VC's. He describes how these industries will be forced to change and how you can become a winner by changing faster than your competition - or lose everything if you believe that your current business model will survive. A thought provoking and very inspiring part of his boo

What Would Google Do? Mentions in Our Blog

What Would Google Do? in 22 Titles We'd Choose to Study in an Alternate Universe
22 Titles We'd Choose to Study in an Alternate Universe
Published by Beth Clark • August 23, 2018

Back to school time means beach reads come out of your bag and textbooks go in, but that doesn't mean the fun is over. While we (obviously) embrace all things learning and reading (because books), even we have to admit that some textbooks are a bit, um...dry. To ease the transition, here are 22 alternative academic titles that are entertaining, practical and, well, educational.

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