![]() |
Overhyped piece of garbage
This book sadly doesn't live up to the hype. It reads as an advertisement for the services of the authors and even uses one of the authors as a case study. The authors use every old marketing trick in the book to try to sell in the new internet world. Truly long online sales letters and one page websites that try to gather user data are not revolutionary and are a true turn off to lots of folks. It is rare that I return a book but this one is going back.Ok - but not great
I guess it depends what you are looking for in this book, but a lot of the same old stuff rehashed here. Mainly relevant to "sales letter" type websites. Not ecommerce if that is what you are after.An Excellent Approach for the Indie Writer ...
For any small business, the Guerrilla series on building a business at a lower cost is an excellent resurce. We've used "Guerrilla Marketing" in our small business for more than 5 years, and found it very useful in helping our business grow while keeping our costs down. Briefly, the differences between Guerrilla Marketing and traditional marketing are a greater dependence on personal networking, word-of-mouth, and personal efforts, and the realization that marketing includes everything a business person does, including the design of the Web site and the appearance of the store. Not to mention having a good product and a passion for your business. But perhaps the biggest difference is that the Guerrilla Marketer understands that building a business and marketing it takes time. It's a process that goes on all the time, for as long as it takes to be successful. It doesn't take a lot of money, but it does take time. I think that as a writer that's the most important lesson I've learned from reading Guerrilla Marketing on the Internet. The Internet is a flash thing. In designing Web sites, there's the rule of three's: 3 seconds to get someone's attention, and 3 clicks for them to find what they're looking for on a site. Ironically, using such a fast system and making it work for an entrepreneur is not a short process. Bulding a Web site? Make sure it represents your company, because it's your store window to the world's Main Street. Using a Blog? If not, you might consider doing so because it's a very useful tool in personal networking on the Web. But building relationships in cyberspace takes time, and cultivating customers takes time. This book defines all the terms businesspeople may not yet understand and best of all, takes the fear out of them. Why not do a podcast? Try RSS feeds, by all means. Guerrilla Marketing on the Internet is a perfect marketing approach for Web 2.0 social networking. If you're at all uncertain of how to use the new technologies -- or even what they are -- this book will educate you. And probably make you more money along the way.Novice to Intermediate marketers
If you are new to internet marketing this is a great book. The tips and ideas are excellent and actionable. It is not a book on SEO or PPC advertising but is up to date enough to address those subjects and point you in directions on where to go. It is a book on a broad spectrum of internet marketing and how to execute what it identifies. I will read it more than once.Guerrilla's of the World Unite
All the Guerrilla books seem like smart buys to me. Levinson is a very clear speaker and his writing speaks directly to the heart of the matter. Every page offers practical, inspiring advice that makes you want to get moving in your life. This is very good for anyone who wants to market something. I am using it to help build an experimental writing website for Coatlism Press and [...] and it has helped me immensely. I strongly recommend it to anybody with any product. If it can help sell books and writing, which are hard to sell, I could only imagine how much help it could give to a faster selling product (like protein powder).Keyword : marketing

No comments:
Post a Comment