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Reviews for The consultants̓ guide to getting business on the Internet

 The consultants̓ guide to getting business on the Internet magazine reviews

The average rating for The consultants̓ guide to getting business on the Internet based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-11-22 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Greg Wrench
I have a love/hate relationship with this book. On one hand I am a believer in the basic messages of the book. Corporations are shells, corporate speak is a joke, people need to be themselves and the web provides a platform to do so on a scale never before available. On the other hand the writing is arrogant. It comes off as we know better than the world and people who like to use spell-check or make decisions are sheep. The following paragraph I read while on a plane. I wanted to absolutely scream after reading it but thought better as that may have put me in Guantanamo. Sometimes we run from our fallibility by being decisive. But doubt is the natural human state, and decisiveness -- more addictive than anything you might shoot into your veins -- is often based on a superstitious belief in the magic of action. That paragraph and this one If you need to hear how the professional voice sounds, dig out any memo you wrote four years ago and compare it to how you'd write an e-mail about it now. A professional memo obeys implicit rules such as one page is best, no jokes, admit no weakness, spellcheck it carefully, and send it to as few people as possible. Both of these are examples of the tone of the book. Either you are flying by the seat of your pants, going against the corporate grain or you are sheep. I don't buy it and it made this book difficult on many levels. Its has a forced coolness, an arrogant take that is very hard to like even if you believe in the message. That being said I would recommend you read the book because it will remind you that you are human and to act like one. There are some very good messages as well. Unfortunately the voice of the messenger is pretty damn irritating.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-07-10 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Daniel Jaconetti
Rate This I have no idea who recommended The Cluetrain Manifesto, but it ended up on my Goodreads "want to read" list, and it arrived in my local library a few days ago. I honestly thought it was a fiction book from the title, something along the lines of The Monkey Wrench Gang, perhaps. Turns out The Cluetrain Manifesto is a breathless paean to the Internet circa 2001, about how the internet will revolutionize business (though the version I'm reading has been updated with some sobered hedging by the authors ten years later). The primary thesis of the authors is that markets are at heart conversations, and that businesses will either enable the freewheeling conversations empowered by the Net, or fight a losing battle for control. I don't want to wave away the advances that the internet has engendered, as I think it's too easy to downplay, especially for you young whippersnappers who don't even recall rotary phones. It really has been transformative. But from the vantage point of 2016, we can also see that the breathless prognosticating of the original Cluetrain hasn't quite panned out. We're seeing the once wide open, seemingly endless forests of internet anarchy, Grateful Dead-and-Phish-tape-trading freedom turn into gated communities as glossy, ad riven, and manipulative as the corporate fiefdoms of old. So what went wrong? Why aren't we living in an unmitigated bliss of genuine, heartfelt connection to one another across digital divides? While markets have indeed become more about peer to peer sharing, people themselves have become more like corporations. Ever heard the term "personal brand"? That's right - as individuals, we now carefully cultivate and craft our online personas, targeting our messaging, delivering elevator pitches to our friends, and twisting our faces and extending our arms to capture selfies at perfectly calibrated angles. Successful businesses today support our social posturing, while gathering our data, as defined by every click, post, and geospatial movement. Successful online personas, such as Kim Kardashian, harness the hall of mirrors to their advantage. In this manner, we market ourselves while allowing ourselves to be marketed. The damning thing about all of this is that the internet of yore - that wild, ecstatic beast - is still right here around us but we gild ourselves into gated, controlled, glossy realms like moths to bulb. Why? Because that's where all the cool kids are.


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