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38 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
Dissent and Debate
Purple Cow is a very tightly-written, well-paced, enjoyable and thought provoking read. While it develops the ideas introduced in the author's earlier works, Ideavirus and Permission Marketing, it is perfectly readable from scratch. And, even though I dislike Godin's unceasing rubbishing of all other approaches to marketing in defence of his own, I do recommend you read...
Published on 4 Feb 2004 by Rory Sutherland
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118 of 125 people found the following review helpful:
A Brief Essay Stretched into a Short Book
Purple Cow is probably the most overrated business book published in 2003. Let me save you money and time. Read the summary below rather than buying and reading this book: Marketing should begin with a differentiated product or service that gets attention (like a purple cow does among a field of brown ones). Be sure that those who care deeply about that...
Published on 4 Jun 2004 by Professor Donald Mitchell
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118 of 125 people found the following review helpful:
A Brief Essay Stretched into a Short Book, 4 Jun 2004
Purple Cow is probably the most overrated business book published in 2003.Let me save you money and time. Read the summary below rather than buying and reading this book: Marketing should begin with a differentiated product or service that gets attention (like a purple cow does among a field of brown ones). Be sure that those who care deeply about that differentiation learn about your product or service (as Krispy Kreme does by providing free donuts when it opens a new store). Those who care will e-mail and tell everyone they know (the ideavirus concept Mr. Godin has written about before). Keep adding new differentiated enhancements to your product or service (pretty soon you don't find a purple cow so interesting). Start looking for totally new business models that provide a breakthrough like your first purple cow did. Don't waste your time and money on advertising. Alternatively, it's dangerous not to do this because your product or service will be lost among all of the other brown cows (undifferentiated offerings). I congratulate Mr. Godin on his marketing skill. Turning these few old saws with a few new examples into a best seller is outstanding marketing. Otherwise, I would grade this book as a one star effort. It will only be of value to those who have never read anything about the power of business model innovation. To learn how to do successful business model innovation, you will have to look elsewhere. I was particularly disappointed that he relied on examples that are so old. Starbucks, HBO and Krispy Kreme, for instance, haven't done a business model innovation in years. Only the JetBlue example is recent. Yet the world is full of new examples he could have talked about. Actually, the book's key metaphor is flawed. While a purple cow (like the title and cover of this book) will certainly get your attention (and may get you to spend a few dollars to investigate it), is there really anyone out there who wants an actual purple cow because it provides any value other than uniqueness? The example reminds me of the old-time professional wrestler, Gorgeous George, who always wore purple and used that color in everything he owned (including his car and turkeys on his ranch near Yucaipa, California). Yes, the purple attracted your attention . . . but unless you liked his wrestling, that one glance was the end of it. I remember driving to his ranch to see a purple turkey, but never went back. Actually, the charity cows that are painted and decorated by different artists and then auctioned off in different cities would have made a better metaphor for this book. Like much of what pretends to be new and different in business books today, this book is simply dressed up on modern clothes and new terms. I suggest you read Strategy Maps, the Innovator's Solution and Corporate Creativity if you want to learn how create these changes successfully in a company. As I finished the book, I began to realize that much of what is wrong with business gurus today is that they love to tell their own ideas . . . but are seldom willing to do the hard work necessary to locate and measure how to do what they espouse. It made me realize that I should always "walk my talk to teaching people how to do what I encourage them to do."
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46 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
A Brief Essay Stretched into a Short Book, 31 Mar 2004
Purple Cow is probably the most overrated business book published in 2003.Let me save you money and time. Read the summary below rather than buying and reading this book: Marketing should begin with a differentiated product or service that gets attention (like a purple cow does among a field of brown ones). Be sure that those who care deeply about that differentiation learn about your product or service (as Krispy Kreme does by providing free donuts when it opens a new store). Those who care will e-mail and tell everyone they know (the ideavirus concept Mr. Godin has written about before). Keep adding new differentiated enhancements to your product or service (pretty soon you don't find a purple cow so interesting). Start looking for totally new business models that provide a breakthrough like your first purple cow did. Don't waste your time and money on advertising. Alternatively, it's dangerous not to do this because your product or service will be lost among all of the other brown cows (undifferentiated offerings). I congratulate Mr. Godin on his marketing skill. Turning these few old saws with a few new examples into a best seller is outstanding marketing. Otherwise, I would grade this book as a one star effort. It will only be of value to those who have never read anything about the power of business model innovation. To learn how to do successful business model innovation, you will have to look elsewhere. I was particularly disappointed that he relied on examples that are so old. Starbucks, HBO and Krispy Kreme, for instance, haven't done a business model innovation in years. Only the JetBlue example is recent. Yet the world is full of new examples he could have talked about. Actually, the book's key metaphor is flawed. While a purple cow (like the title and cover of this book) will certainly get your attention (and may get you to spend a few dollars to investigate it), is there really anyone out there who wants an actual purple cow because it provides any value other than uniqueness? The example reminds me of the old-time professional wrestler, Gorgeous George, who always wore purple and used that color in everything he owned (including his car and turkeys on his ranch near Yucaipa, California). Yes, the purple attracted your attention . . . but unless you liked his wrestling, that one glance was the end of it. I remember driving to his ranch to see a purple turkey, but never went back. Actually, the charity cows that are painted and decorated by different artists and then auctioned off in different cities would have made a better metaphor for this book. Like much of what pretends to be new and different in business books today, this book is simply dressed up on modern clothes and new terms. I suggest you read Strategy Maps, the Innovator's Solution and Corporate Creativity if you want to learn how create these changes successfully in a company. As I finished the book, I began to realize that much of what is wrong with business gurus today is that they love to tell their own ideas . . . but are seldom willing to do the hard work necessary to locate and measure how to do what they espouse. It made me realize that I should always "walk my talk to teaching people how to do what I encourage them to do."
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38 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
Dissent and Debate, 4 Feb 2004
Purple Cow is a very tightly-written, well-paced, enjoyable and thought provoking read. While it develops the ideas introduced in the author's earlier works, Ideavirus and Permission Marketing, it is perfectly readable from scratch. And, even though I dislike Godin's unceasing rubbishing of all other approaches to marketing in defence of his own, I do recommend you read it. Let's be honest, there's so little dissent and debate about the really important questions in marketing, it's easy to forgive the few dissenters for being extremists. Working in this business is a bit like visiting Zurich; the place is so conformist, after a few days you start looking approvingly at the drug addicts and hippies - anything for a bit of variety.Anyhow, Godin's big thesis is that, for any new product to be successful, it must be intrinsically interesting, like the purple cow of the title, and cannot rely on subsequent marketing efforts to lend it a certain false notability. Even then, for a product merely to be interesting is not enough on its own: it must gain the attention of a particular group of innovators - those who are not merely open to adopting new ideas and products but those who also go on actively to evangelise them among the rest of the population, thereby seeding them among the early majority. Because of this adoption path, Godin avers, mass advertising can actually be counterproductive, as it effectively does the word-of-mouth brigade out of a job. And the innovators in any market, who like to discover products for themselves, are instantly turned off anything that is touted indiscriminately in the mass media. I think he is generally right on most of this. Most of us in our businesses are naturally inquisitive, and it is healthy for us to be reminded of how tiny the appetite is for innovation among most consumers in most categories. Generally (and Godin is lucky being an American - try fostering innovation among elderly Frenchmen, say) people are not looking for new ways of doing things, not least because the mass market is already rather well catered for by the many established mass market brands. People do not wake every day looking for another formal airline, another refreshing soft drink, yet another breakfast cereal. This surely explains why so many of the successful "launches" (EasyJet, Red Bull, Fruit Winders, texting are four European examples Godin doesn't mention) were not launched at all in the conventional sense. They were adopted by a niche group of innovators, who eventually expanded their use. Godin is also right in attacking the "TV-industrial complex" and the way it makes the mass media tail wag the NPD dog. Because it's assumed that mass media will launch Product X, it is duly assumed that Product X must be developed to appeal to the mass market of TV viewers. Because there is no instant appetite for new mass products, one launch after another fails. I believe this. My chief complaint is as follows. In attacking the TV-industrial complex, I think Godin overlloks the fact that the principal use of mass advertising is not the launching of new brands but the maintenance of old ones. And I think he could pay more heed to the remarkable fact that the innovators of the last century (the Fords, the Kelloggs, the Guinnesses, the Amexes) have retained their positions remarkably well. Surely mass media had rather a lot to do with this? I also know from experience that mass advertising can be vital in preventing a new innovation being stigmatised as something purely for geeky innovators (a risk that imperilled the speedy uptake of broadband for a time). Lastly, I wish Godin had read the recent Y&R paper "You're Getting Old" before reading this book. A fusion of his idea, and the Y&R insight (that people's brand preferences become frozen in time once they hit 35) would have produced a still better book. But never mind. All of you can gain one thing from sending bulk copies of this book to your clients. And that's the understanding that NPD might sometimes be better entrusted to the DM agency, with its understanding of segments, than to the Ad agency, with its obsession with mass.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
Smart Thinking, 4 Feb 2004
How many marketing books have you read that are actually enjoyable? Not just interesting. Or merely thought provoking. Enjoyable.Seth Godin is one of the smartest marketing thinkers around and one of the most influential. His previous books (Permission Marketing, Idea Virus and Big Red Fez) have all caused waves through the marketing world and they are all a good read too. His new one, Purple Cow, is no less challenging. And no less enjoyable. Based on the premise that the standard five Ps of marketing are no longer sufficient, Godin adds a new one - Purple Cow. Basically if your product isn't remarkable - as a purple cow is - you're going to have a big problem getting consumers to notice it. Simplistic as it sounds, Godin backs up this idea with some smart thinking and lots of great examples. Enjoyable it may be, but this is not a comfortable read as he believes that advertising (in the way we know it now) is basically dead. But there is an exciting role left to marketers; to make a big difference to their company by helping create products and services that are worth marketing in the first place. He says "...you must develop products, services and techniques that the market will actually seek out" If you're interested in where marketing is going, it's a must read.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
A purple publication!, 9 Jan 2004
Seth Godin continues to provide inspirational work. This easy to read book puts together a thesis which we should all consider if we want to grow in this information overload world. Simply speaking, his argument states to win, our products/services/individuality must be remarkable: worth making a remark about. Will you be the best, the most different, the wackiest? The parody? Each of these approaches set you aside from the 50 percentile: those companies who are "justa", average, standard. If you are remarkable, you are talked about and remembered. Tie a quality product/service with this and you can improve success. Look at Yo Sushi!, Virgin Atlantic, The Geek Squad.I had the pleasure of hearing Seth speak at a recent conference. This book shows he practices what he speaks. A purple performer. Recommend the book to your friends. Give a copy to your Marketing department. Give a copy to your Web designers. Give a copy to everyone. Being purple is inspiring.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Abysmal - what a waste of my money!, 30 Jul 2009
I read this as advised by the business advisor we employed to help generate more sales in our small business. What a waste of time and money. It tells you absolutely nothing beyond basic common sense. Clearly the man does have a good business brain; he wrote this twaddle and is selling it at vast profit to himself. There are so many other GOOD books out there; give this a wide berth. Or, if you must read it, at least get it from a library and don't spend money on it!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Make an Amazing business today., 14 Nov 2007
Godin isn't doing anything revolutionary in his books. This is good. He isn't trying to be clever. This is good. He is however, trying to get you to get your business to work. He goes about this by taking the most obvious, elementary ideas and expressing them simply and with plenty of information to back up what he is saying. He uses diagrams, stories, case studies and whatever else comes along to illustrate these points again and again. In this book there is one basic idea. That businesses are ten a penny, like cows in a field. How do you make your business stand out from all the other cows? Have a purple cow! Make your business unique and amazing. It seems, simple, it is simple, but hardly anyone is doing it. If people spent more time implementing Godin's brilliant ideas, and less time worrying about having something revolutionary to do or say, there would be a lot more fantastic, successful businesses out there.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
This book could well be a Purple Cow itself!, 1 May 2003
By A Customer
Another fantastic offering from Seth Godin. He is the master of marketing, explaining things in easy to understand language, using well known examples.With practical advice and tips, you could do much worse than read this. Hugely enthusiastic on the subject - it's infectious. I couldn't stop reading it, even missed my train stop!
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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
Remarkable Marketing, 6 May 2003
By A Customer
Remarkable!!! Marketing Innavation!!!! Power ideas !!! Purple Cow by Godin give the innovation on remarkable marketing .It 's the new thinking on the Most powerful P"s Marketing Mix that never teach in B-school and will be sound practice in the real business world.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
One of the best reads ever, 7 April 2008
This book is without a doubt, one of the most inspiring and motivating I have ever had the pleasure of reading. Very straight-forward, very clever and very thought-provoking.
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