"History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce."
Karl Marx, Capitalist Critic
For fans of the first and second edition, the primary mission of In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 (now 40) Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters remains unchanged. Within this third edition you’ll find a carefully updated and curated collection of the best of the worst and the newest of the stupid (and all of them completely avoidable). As with Dante’s Inferno, this book is designed to embark you on a journey to the stygian depths of Marketing Hell. There’s Steve Ballmer lashed to a rock for eternity as hordes of Windows 8 users endlessly devour his liver while screaming “Where’s the Start Button!” Next to him Jeff Bezos is endlessly stacking unsold pallets of Fire Phones in a warehouse that always adds a new level just when it seems the building is full. There's Sundar Pinchai strapped to a chair and while explaining forever (or until the Department of Justice finishes its anti-trust probe, whichever comes first) how Google search algorithms work to zombie-eyed members of Congress who immediately forget everything they’ve just been told.
But not to worry. As with Dante and Virgil, Stupidity will guide you through this blasted landscape, ensuring you avoid pestilences such as Steve Jobs Disease, the whirling terror of Microsoft’s Windows 8 positioning maelstrom, and the fiery lakes of political doom Facebook, Google, Twitter and others have voluntarily plunged into. For you, history will not repeat itself.
A quick sampling of just some of the Vedic lessons you’ll learn on your 4 journey include:
Why it’s a bad idea for CEOs to promote yourself to the role of just-like-Steve-Jobs-product-manager-God when you have no PM training and lack Jobs’ innate critique skills:
On June 14, 2014 in Seattle, Jeff Bezos, doing his very best to imitate Steve Jobs live on stage, introduced the Fire Phone. But it soon became apparent that whatever spirit force Bezos had filched from Jobs, it had failed to charge him with the hoped-for charisma and presence. His presentation was overlong, flat, and rushed through natural applause points. As the plodding session ground on, you could feel the Jobs mana draining from Bezos’ body. When he reached the section discussing the Fire Phone’s rubber frame, the spirit force had already spiraled off the stage and headed back to the afterworld. When Bezos was finally done, everyone felt relieved.
What happens when you fail to study the history of one of high-tech’s legendary positioning catastrophes:
If you had studied the history of WordStar vs. WordStar 2000 in Stupidity's first two edition, the Start button hadn’t disappeared; it had mutated into a new interface which bore little resemblance to the desktop metaphor that had fronted Windows since 1995. In short, 28 years after the introduction of WordStar 2000, Microsoft had created two new products which:
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, Etats-Unis
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Vendeur : World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, Etats-Unis
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Vendeur : Bookbot, Prague, Rébublique tchèque
Softcover. Etat : Fine. Leichte Rillen / Abschurfungen / Risse / Knicke; Gebrochener Buchrucken; Geknickte Ecken / Seiten; Leichter Riss (Seiten). "History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce." Karl Marx, Capitalist Critic. This third edition continues the mission of its predecessors, presenting a curated collection of high-tech marketing disasters--both classic and recent--that are completely avoidable. Embark on a journey through Marketing Hell, encountering figures like Steve Ballmer, eternally tormented by Windows 8 users, and Jeff Bezos, endlessly stacking unsold Fire Phones. Sundar Pichai is depicted explaining Google algorithms to forgetful Congress members, highlighting the absurdities of the tech world.Guided by Stupidity, you'll navigate this landscape, avoiding pitfalls such as the infamous Steve Jobs Disease and the chaos of Microsoft's Windows 8 positioning. You'll learn valuable lessons, including the dangers of CEOs trying to emulate Steve Jobs without the necessary training or charisma, as demonstrated by Bezos' lackluster Fire Phone presentation.The book also explores the consequences of ignoring historical failures in tech positioning, illustrated by the WordStar debacle and Microsoft's missteps with Windows 8. Additionally, it critiques the evolving landscape of payment platforms, warning that political biases could lead to the rise of alternative banking solutions. Prepare for a humorous yet cautionary exploration of marketing misadventures in the high-tech arena. N° de réf. du vendeur 5a6f5a28-8528-4b10-a0f6-9324c91105aa
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