What Would Google Do?: Reverse-Engineering the Fastest Growing Company in the History of the World

Voorkant
Harper Collins, 20 sep 2011 - 288 pagina's

In a book that’s one part prophecy, one part thought experiment, one part manifesto, and one part survival manual, internet impresario and blogging pioneer Jeff Jarvis reverse-engineers Google, the fastest-growing company in history, to discover forty clear and straightforward rules to manage and live by. At the same time, he illuminates the new worldview of the internet generation: how it challenges and destroys—but also opens up—vast new opportunities. His findings are counterintuitive, imaginative, practical, and above all visionary, giving readers a glimpse of how everyone and everything—from corporations to governments, nations to individuals—must evolve in the Google era.

What Would Google Do? is an astonishing, mind-opening book that, in the end, is not about Google. It’s about you.

 

Inhoudsopgave

New Relationship
11
New Architecture
24
New Publicness
40
New Society
48
New Economy
54
New Business Reality
70
New Attitude
82
New Ethic 91 16
91
Media
123
Advertising
145
Utilities
162
Were more than consumers
177
Markets minus middlemen
195
Public Institutions
210
Beyond Google?
226
Join the opensource gift economy
243

New Speed
103
New Imperatives
109
Index
257
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2011)

Jeff Jarvis is the proprietor of one of the web’s most popular and respected blogs about media, Buzzmachine.com. He heads the Tow-Knight Center for Entrepreneurial Journalism at the City University of New York. He was named one of a hundred worldwide media leaders by the World Economic Forum at Davos in 2007–11 and was the creator and founding editor of Entertainment Weekly magazine. He is the author of the forthcoming book Public Parts: How Sharing in the Digital Age Improves the Way We Work and Live.

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