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Gonzo Marketing: Winning Through Worst Practices [Hardcover]

Christopher Locke
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

30 Oct 2001 1841121665 978-1841121666
Gonzo Marketing is a knuckle–whitening ride to the place where social criticism, biting satire, and serious commerce meet... and where the outdated ideals of mass marketing and broadcast media are being left in the dust. As master of ceremonies at the wake for traditional one–size–fits–all marketing, Chris Locke has assembled a unique guest list, from Geoffrey Chaucer to Hunter S. Thompson, to guide us through the revolution that is rocking business today, as people connect on the Web to form powerful micromarkets. These networked communities, based on candour, trust, passion, and a general disdain for anything that smacks of corporate smugness, reflect much deeper trends in our culture, which Locke illuminates with his characteristic wit.

Product details

  • Hardcover: 252 pages
  • Publisher: Capstone (30 Oct 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1841121665
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841121666
  • Product Dimensions: 2.4 x 16.5 x 24.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,058,153 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Review

Sunday Times Book of the Week ... "...Lockes argument cannot be dismissed lightly..." (Sunday Times 30 December 2001)

"..the average Cre@teOnline reader will enjoy Gonzo Marketing.." (Cre@teOnline Magzine January 2002)

"..Gonzo Marketing is a breath of fresh air.." (Marketing, 24 January 2002)

"..entertaining style. It is certainly a great read.." (Marketing Business, February 2002

Book of the Week ... "...Lockes argument cannot be dismissed lightly..." (Sunday Times 30 December 2001)

"..the average Cre@teOnline reader will enjoy Gonzo Marketing.." (Cre@teOnline Magzine January 2002)

"..Gonzo Marketing is a breath of fresh air.." (Marketing, 24 January 2002)

"..entertaining style. It is certainly a great read.." (Marketing Business, February 2002

From the Inside Flap

"Ladies and Gentlemen, please return your tray tables to the fully upright and locked position, suspend your disbelief and put on you tinfoil pyramid hats. We are now entering lights, cue music] the Brand Dimension!"
from Gonzo Marketing

Gonzo Marketing is a knuckle–whitening ride to the place where social criticism, biting satire, and serious commerce meet and where the outdated ideals of mass marketing and broadcast media are being left in the dust. As master of ceremonies at the wake for traditional one–size–fits–all marketing, Chris Locke has assembled a unique guest list, from Geoffrey Chaucer to Hunter S. Thompson, to guide us through the revolution that is rocking business today, as people connect on the Web to form powerful micromarkets. These networked communities, based on candour, trust, passion, and a general disdain for anything that smacks of corporate smugness, reflect much deeper trends in our culture, which Locke illuminates with his characteristic wit.

Just as gonzo journalism rose in response to "objective" news standards that claimed to foster fairness but in practice discouraged writers from speaking their minds in their own voices, so too does gonzo marketing call fro a similar response to assumptions about consumer behaviour that no longer relate to how people actually live their lives.

Gonzo Marketing is not yet–another nostrum for hoodwinking the unwary. It′s about market advocacy. It describes how "the artist formerly known as advertising" must do a 180. It′s about transforming the marketing message from "we want your money" to "we share your interests". It′s about tapping into, listening to, and even forming alliances with emerging on–line markets, who probably know more about your company than you do. It′s a hip–hop cover of boring old best practices played backwards. The paradox is that companies that support and promote these communities can have everything they′ve always wanted: greater market share, customer loyalty, brand equity.

Irreverent, penetrating, profoundly simple, and on–the–money, Gonzo Marketing is the raucous wake–up call that no one interested in any aspect of twenty–first century business – from the trading floor right up to the boardroom – can afford to ignore.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars
4.0 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars You Are Not Alone 22 Nov 2001
Format:Hardcover
For any of you who work in the tortured online world, where plugging commerce into the web is your daily challenge and for whom the 'business as usual' conventional wisdom is beginning to grind you down, this book, along with Mr Locke's previous effort - The Cluetrain Manifesto - will salve your pain.

If, on the other hand, you still don't believe that life on the web is fundamentally different for real people then now is an extremely good time to have the sanity check that the Gonzo line of thinking provides. For those of you who have read this already, or any of Locke's previous writings, it may seem odd to see the words 'sanity', 'locke' and 'gonzo' in the same sentence, but that is exactly how I feel about it. This book touched a deeply frustrated nerve in me and has helped me hugely in ordering my thoughts.

If you read one business book in the next twelve months, this must be it. Hell, you may even enjoy it.

Steve.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Caution: This book contains many vulgar words that would probably earn its content an R rating if it were a motion picture.

Gonzo Marketing is an eclectic monologue with as little structure as you can imagine. Think of it as an eloquent rant in favor of authentic communication about what individuals truly care about in overcoming the blandness of corporate communications and broadcast advertising.

The essence of the book's key observations about communications are contained on pp. 125-126.

These are essentially that (1) market research is irrelevant to creating improved ideas (2) best practices in communications and marketing usually aren't very good (3) each person should turn their frustration with mass communications into actions to create change (4) engage in improved communications because you see the potential to do so (5) give yourself permission to speak candidly from the heart (6) use good story telling devices to communication (7) communicate on behalf of what people need, not what someone wants to sell them (8) let individuals speak for a company, rather than the company speak for itself and (9) let it all out to make your points vivid (emulating the methods of people like Hunter S. Thompson in their fiction).

The book's core proposal is almost totally contained in chapter 7 (which a few cross-references to small sections of earlier chapters). Companies should shift their attention to individual conversations among people who care about common issues and interests. Employees should be encouraged to speak on behalf of the company, as individuals. Companies should underwrite sites that are unconnected to the company's products and services, but do advance the public good. This should be done in a way that leaves independence of thought and expression intact. In many cases, not much more will be involved than getting an exclusive relationship and directing traffic to the "best in breed" independent web site.

I thought that the chapter that critiqued modern marketing thinking was superb. A friend of mine who is a professor of marketing once told me in private that he believed that marketing had added no new ideas since around 1940. Mr. Locke certainly rams that point home. Even new terms (like "permission marketing") seem to be reflecting old concepts (e-mail spam, in this case).

Mr. Locke has such an "outside-in" look at these issues that I think he misses a lot of basics. I don't really care what Ford employees think about nonautomotive issues. I would be very interested to see what these employees have to say on automotive and truck issues. Mr. Locke doesn't address a primary reason why most companies put a lock on employee communications, the fear of creating large lawsuits from the plaintiff's bar. Also, many companies do have their senior executives visibly sharing their views in public forums where questions can be asked by anyone. Watch CNBC any day, and you will see CEOs and CFOs trooping across the screen in large numbers and being asked questions that viewers have sent in by e-mail. Some companies do have a deep and thorough climate of commitment to purposes larger than themselves. Most people would agree that such is the case with ServiceMaster, Timberland, many educational publishers, and investment managers of socially-conscious mutual funds.

Some ideas are so large and important that they can be shared more broadly. Shouldn't companies focus their communications where they can reach the most people with narrow messages that engage those involved in meaningful conversations? For example, many companies permit extensive e-mail interactions with various parts of their companies.

At bottom, the views here are probably more reflective of a person who likes to be different from the group, than from a vision of the future that will become the dominant one. Will the power of well-presented drama as created by the best talents be overwhelmed by the opportunity to share thoughts on discussion boards with like-minded people? I doubt it. I suspect we will continue to enjoy high quality mass communications as well as highly individualized ones where there is a vacuum on subjects of interest. Frankly, I already do too much typing.

What would you like to know more about and from whom? Let them know. You may be surprised by the welcome you receive.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Genuine insight expressed in an obnoxious voice 8 April 2002
Format:Hardcover
Two of the four reviews on the back of this book suggest that its style is both 'provocative' and 'infuriating' (must have been words used in the press release), and having just finished it I'd agree. In fact I can honestly say that it's the only book I've ever actually shouted at. Much of the book is pretentious, patronising, irritatingly obscure, politically correct to the point of cliche or just plain wrong. But having said that there are a number of sections within the book that are none of these things, and that brilliantly illuminate the fundamental reasons why the relationship between the Internet and business (particularly Marketing) has unfolded in the way that it has, and which also present a convincing vision about how it's going to be (or should be) in the near future.

I've given it 4 stars, which is really 6 out of 5 for message, minus 2 for style...

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