Posts Tagged ‘Chris Brogan’
If you’ve visited our Brandtailers office you probably noticed that we have books everywhere. All on marketing and advertising. We’re fanatical about staying ahead of the curve, so we read a lot.
But, if you only have time to read a few books over the summer, how do you choose from Amazon’s 33,000 titles in marketing, advertising, and social media? Ugh.
We filtered through our library and found what we believe are today’s five best books to read. They offer you a well-rounded understanding of the latest consumer preferences, marketing strategies and technology need-to-knows. Hopefully you’ll have time to devour a few. (Oh, and for those of us who spend more time in their cars or at the gym than sitting with a book, there’s always Audible.com)
1. DON’T MAKE ME THINK – Steve Krug

Although it’s a couple years old, it’s still the best book on what makes a great website. It’s written in plain, and downright funny, language. We often give it to clients as gifts. It’s not for programmers. It’s for the rest of us.
2. TRIBES – Seth Godin
Seth hit another home run with Tribes. He took what is happening in the world of marketing and applied it to basic human behavior. By the time you finish this short book, you’ll feel like you’re viewing the world through a whole new lens.
3. THE NEW RULES OF MARKETING AND PR – David Meerman Scott
David just revised this book with new updates, so make sure you get the latest edition. It has the best examples of how things have changed for marketers, along with the new rules of engagement. It’s simple, useful and inspiring.
4. TRUST AGENTS – Chris Brogan and Julien Smith
For anyone who has spent a year or more in social media, this book may seem a bit simplistic. But the overall message of how trust drives today’s world of marketing is the most important and valuable take away. It makes you want to be a better person (and marketer).
5. WEB ANALYTICS 2.0 – Avinash Kaushik
OK, maybe sections of this book get into a little too much detail, but you can skip those parts. Avinash is so entertaining in the way he explains current web technology, you’ll be chuckling while learning. Don’t be afraid of the title (or his name).
What books would you add to this list?
Tags: Avinash Kaushik, books, Chris Brogan, Consumer Behavior, David Meerman Scott, marketing strategy, Marketing Technology, Seth Godin, Social Media, Steve Krug, summer reading
Posted in Consumer Behavior, Marketing Strategy Research, Marketing Technology | Leave a Comment »
We just finished putting together a 5 minute video summary of our day with Chris Brogan last month. (Thank you John!) The day started with his VIP meet and greet, then to lunch at Wahoo’s with Skip1.org, and then to a book signing at Barnes and Noble with Kogi BBQ. After all that, we took him over to a Chapman Ad Club exclusive interview and he finished the evening with his talk in Memorial Hall at Chapman University (and we tried to capture it all in just 5 minutes!)
Take a look and be sure to share with friends!
[youtube y4NuICG_zHU]
Tags: advertising, advertising agency, Barnes and Noble, Brandtailers, Chapman University, Chris Brogan, Kogi BBQ, Marketing, Social Media, Trust Agents, Twitter
Posted in Brand Management | Brandtailing, Events & Meetups, Social Media | Leave a Comment »
My agency was invited to attend Google’s “Agency Day” a couple of weeks ago at their headquarters in Mountain View. For anyone who has spent more than five minutes with me, you know I am a huge advocate of almost everything Google offers, whereas other marketers have just warmed up to calling them a Frienemy. To me, they help level the playing field for smaller agencies like Brandtailers, and for that I am eternally grateful.
We were there with another fifty-or-so people from agencies our size, all invited by Google to be schmoozed, thanked for our existence, get our business pulses checked, and to be trained on some new “agency tools”. After a nice but fairly basic keynote presentation, we were broken up into small groups for one-on-one time with their specific team experts. Twenty minutes into an update on some new AdWords tools, I had agency leaders in my group saying they really didn’t understand how AdWords worked. Some knew a little, some knew nothing. My agency knew much more. My head swelled.
Then we moved on to Google Analytics. That got really interesting. Turns out the agency leaders that didn’t know much about AdWords knew even less about Analytics. Or AdSense. Or Google Maps. And they sure didn’t know about Wave or Chrome OS. By lunchtime my head was pretty big. But as I chowed down their five-star free-cafeteria cuisine I remembered my virtual mentors like Seth Godin, Chris Brogan, David Meerman Scott, CC Chapman, and a few guys named Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Eric Schmidt. I quickly slapped myself back to reality. Compared to the people I study and learn from every day, I know nothing.
This trip to Google’s headquarters confirmed for me that it’s all relative. People’s levels of knowledge and understanding about the online world are as broad and varied as the businesses they run. In my world terms like Social Media, the Long Tail, and The Cloud are thrown around every day by the digital gurus I follow, but the vast majority of well-educated Americans don’t know what any of this means. Yet.
For now just knowing that you need to know it is a good start. The day will come (and I say it’s very soon) where the digital world will be the life blood of most businesses. The trick to learning it is not being afraid to ask questions. Yes, it can be intimidating. But yes, it does start to make sense pretty quickly once you get all the puzzle pieces in front of you. I get several people a week asking me, “So what’s this Twitter thing?” At first I think, wow, I can’t believe they’re asking me this. But then I say to myself, “That’s great. They asked. They know that they need to know.” It’s the first step.
Tags: CC Chapman, Chris Brogan, David Meerman Scott, Eric Schmidt, google, internet, knowledge, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Seth Godin
Posted in Relationship Marketing, Social Media | Leave a Comment »













