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Reviews for Advanced Brake Technology

 Advanced Brake Technology magazine reviews

The average rating for Advanced Brake Technology based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2014-01-03 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Brad Cox
Rather disappointing -- it reads like a book length sales brochure for Envirosell, the company the author founded. Every page follows the same formula: A foolish retailer was doing this. I told him to do this. He did, and he is now more virile, has a better looking wife, has more money than he could imagine, and he thanks me daily. This gets old. A few fun tricks of retailing are buried here and there, but the book should be subtitled: How to Get Rich Using Common Sense.
Review # 2 was written on 2015-05-30 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Roger Collord
Firstly, Why We Buy should have been How They Buy, because 1) the book is about insights on shopping (and not shoppers), based on extensive observations of shoppers when they're shopping and, 2) it's addressed from the retailer's point of view, about what they can do to make people buy more things. The structure of the book goes something like this: * Opening scene: the retailers were basically village simpletons who happened to have stores that were being visited by cattle masquerading as customers. Oh, and the world as we know it is about to end! * And then I, in my magnificent self, and Envirosell (insert trumpet blowing), happened on the scene. * Sarcastic commentary with two examples of how ridiculous the current practices were. * Trumpet Envirosell's modus operandi of spending hours collecting data. * Voila! Insert insight such as old ladies products being sold on the bottom shelf. * Sales went up by 88000%. * Deride two companies that didn't take my advice. * Trumpet Envirosell's Science of Shopping. * End credits. Repeat. Okay, it's not that bad. Mostly. If you manage to plough through all the noise, there are some nuggets in there. But it's just that it takes so much persistence and teeth-grinding to actually do so. Where the book does leave a mark is when Underhill talks about facts of consumer behaviour, with empirical evidence arrived at with truckloads of detailed observation of shoppers, data analysis and mining. Such points do provide for some fascinating moments in terms of an anthropological perspective, but Underhill's writing style and personal opinions mean that it becomes a grind. At places the book is just plain sexist, generalised, and archaic with statements like "We always advise our bookstore clients to group sections by gender, acknowledging the tendency of men to cluster in sports, business, do-it-yourself and computers while women troll psychology, self-help, health, food, diet, home and garden." This could have been a truly great book. Or at least a great read, if he had structured this along the lines of David Ogilvy's Ogilvy on Advertising, which was on a similar theme and genre. Where Ogilvy was elegant, simple and prescriptive, Underhill is verbose, tacky and in-your-face.


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