Publisher: Paramount Marketing Publishing, 2008, 262 pages
ISBN: 978-0-9786602-8-4
Keywords: MBA
How can you be immensely successful for many years, and yet not be imitated by competitors? Impossible, you say. Not so. Virgin Atlantic, the Body Shop, Apple Computers, and Birkenstock they all achieved this status, and there are ample additional examples. They cracked the secret of successful differentiation that is not imitated and are adored by customers who think that they are incomparable. Dr. Dan Herman calls it an Unfair Competitive Advantage. It's not at all unethical. Everyone has a fair chance of attaining such an advantage including, every reader of this book.
There is a secret to successful differentiation that is not imitated. It is a psychological secret that has to do with the way your competitors think. Most marketers today are MBA graduates who tend to think and operate in typical and predictable ways - you might call them MBA Clones. You can take advantage of their biases and outsmart them. In this groundbreaking book, Dr. Dan Herman not only reveals the secret of successful differentiation that is not imitated but also supplies you with a comprehensive set of practical rules and tools that will enable you to make an unfair advantage your reality.
Dr. Herman, a competitive strategy consultant with vast global experience, a seasoned CMO in a large corporation, a branding professional and a businessman, does not tell you to 'think out of the box' as so many do he provides you with a new and comprehensive toolbox for success.
You'll learn:
Using a plethora of examples from top businesses around the world, Dr. Herman offers a business oriented-point of view that is fresh and different, and even humorous at times. Even though this book will turn your thinking inside out, everything in it is practical and easily applicable in any kind of business.
Hmmm, it sounds in the title, like this book is geared to people who wants to outsmart me! Thus, making me read it!
To be frank, it is not as suspected, another "MBA in a Box" book, but a presentation of the working model for strategy and marketing (with a focus on Branding). It is interesting to see how another MBA (or rather, PhD) have adopted the stuff you learn in an MBA to match his own needs. Needless to say, it is pretty interesting, except when you wonder where Finance, Operations, HR, IT/IS, Legal, the Sales part of Marketing, Change Management, Knowledge Management, Globalization, Economics, etc, went.
The book is well written, but lacks a depth that would have made it practical. As it is now, it is merely a decent read.
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