Meatball Sundae: How new marketing is transforming the business world (and how to thrive in it)

Meatball Sundae: How new marketing is transforming the business world (and how to thrive in it)

by SethGodin (Author)

Synopsis

What is a meatball sundae? It's something messy, disgusting and ineffective, the result of combining two perfectly good things that don't go together. Meatballs are the basic staples, the things people need, the stuff that used to be marketed quite well with TV and other mass market techniques. The topping is new marketing: MySpace, websites, YouTube, and all of the magic that CEOs wish would shine atop their companies. The problem? New marketing is lousy at selling meatballs.When confronted with the myriad opportunities presented by new marketing, people usually ask 'How can we make this stuff work for us?' This, as Seth Godin explains in his remarkable new book, is exactly the wrong question.Mapping out 14 trends that are completely remaking what it means to be a marketer - and by extension transforming what we make and how we make it - Godin shows how the question for any thriving 21st century business must be: 'How can we alter our business to become an organization that thrives on new marketing?' Meatball Sundae is an essential guide to the fundamental shift taking place in the marketing and business world, and shows you how to align your business to it.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Piatkus Books
Published: 10 Jan 2008

ISBN 10: 074992831X
ISBN 13: 9780749928315

Media Reviews
'[Seth Godin] is a demigod on the Web' - Forbes.com Take Leo Burnett, David Ogilvy, Bill Bernbach and Mark Twain. Combine their brains and shave their heads. What's left? Seth Godin. - Jay Levinson, author of Guerrilla Marketing
Author Bio
Seth Godin is the best-selling author of Purple Cow, Permission Marketing and Small Is the New Big, among other books, and was named by Forbes.com one of the top 5 web celebs in the business world. He holds an MBA from Stanford University, and has been called the Ultimate Entrepreneur for the Information Age by Business Week magazine.