Groundswell, Expanded and Revised Edition: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies
By (Author) Charlene Li
By (author) Josh Bernoff
Harvard Business Review Press
Harvard Business Review Press
1st June 2011
Expanded and Revised Edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
303.4833
Paperback
352
Width 139mm, Height 209mm, Spine 23mm
354g
Corporate executives struggle to harness the power of social technologies. Twitter, Facebook, blogs, YouTube are where customers discuss products and companies, write their own news, and find their own deals but how do you integrate these activities into your broader marketing efforts It's an unstoppable groundswell that affects every industry -- yet it's still utterly foreign to most companies running things now.
When consumers you've never met are rating your company's products in public forums with which you have no experience or influence, your company is vulnerable. In Groundswell, Josh Bernoff and Charlene Li explain how to turn this threat into an opportunity.
In this updated and expanded edition of Groundswell, featuring an all new introduction and chapters on Twitter and social media integration, you'll learn to:
Evaluate new social technologies as they emerge
Determine how different groups of consumers are participating in social technology arenas
Apply a four-step process for formulating your future strategy
Build social technologies into your business
Groundswell is required reading for executives seeking to protect and strengthen their company's public image.
If you havent read the book, I would highly recommend you buy a personal copy and read it to get a comprehensive understanding of how our world is being transformed by social technologies and how you can take advantage of it. - Business 2 Community
Charlene Li is an independent thought leader and founder of the Altimeter Group. Josh Bernoff is a vice president at Forrester Research and one of their most senior and most frequently quoted research analysts. He created the Technographics segmentation, a classification of consumers according to how they approach technology.