Gonzo Marketing, Christopher Locke
Gonzo Marketing, Christopher Locke
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Gonzo Marketing

Author: Christopher Locke

Narrator: Christopher Locke

Abridged: 2 hr 21 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/01/2001


Synopsis

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a knuckle-whitening ride to the place where social criticism, biting satire, and serious commerce meet...and where the outdated ideals of mass marketing and broadcast media are being left in the dust.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, 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 candor, 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.
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 that no one interested in any aspect of twenty-first century business -- from the trading floor right up to the board room -- can afford to ignore.

About The Author

Christopher Locke is co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto, president of Entropy Web Consulting, and editor/publisher of the widely acclaimed and justly infamous webzine, Entropy Gradient Reversals. He has worked for Fujitsu, Ricoh, the Japanese government's "Fifth Generation" artificial intelligence project, Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute, CMP Publications, Mecklermedia, MCI, and IBM. Named in a 2001 Financial Times group survey as one of the "top 50 business thinkers in the world," he has written for a wide variety of business and technology publications/ including Forbes, The Industry Standard, Information Week, Harvard Business Review, and Release 1.0. He lives in Boulder, Colorado. He can be reached at clocke@panix.com.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ravi on August 13, 2016

I think Christopher Locke is the new age philosopher when it comes to the internet and marketing online. This book, like his previously co-authored "The Cluetrain Manifesto", is about what is different about the web and the virtual world. Marketing online is not the same as marketing in the physical......more

Goodreads review by stinaz on November 15, 2012

I'm not sure whether I absolutely love it, or not. I found that the information was nothing new for someone who studied marketing at university. But I can understand (from experience) how most of the world sees marketing as this horrible pushing, selling, solely and soullessly product and profit foc......more

Goodreads review by Lori on January 09, 2018

This gave me hope in the early aughts when I thought digital marketing was going to bring equality and better products and just generally a lot of great cyber hippie stuff. It's probably a fun Quixotic read in 2018. I still really love it.......more

Goodreads review by Alberto on June 14, 2020

few good insight about the re evaluation of how marketing might evolve. writing style often overwrought and unnecessarily stretched.......more

Goodreads review by Jimi on March 25, 2010

I read this book during a sabbatical that I took between my two web development companies in Canberra, SafetyWeb and 108 Digital. It almost made me want to get back onteh horse but I held out for another two years Yes, this is one of the coolest early books that picked up on the emerging possibilities......more