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Dan Roam: The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures
Drawing pictures is an amazing strong help if you try so crack something. Even if drawing and doodling is a familiar thing to you, this book can help you to refine the art of visual thinking. Where was this book when I needed it? (****)
Alexander Osterwalder: Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers
By far the most insightful, practical, fun to read and relevant business book I've read over a long period of time. The tools in this book have gone straight into my daily toolkit. There's a Dutch edition too. (*****)
Bertrand Cesvet: Conversational Capital: How to Create Stuff People Love to Talk About
(**)
Chip Heath: Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die
I found this one of the better books on the hot topics of storytelling and engagement. Where many authors present a couple of far fetched characteristics, the Heath brothers come up with insightful observations on what makes a remarkable story. (****)
Robert B. Cialdini: Influence: Science and Practice (4th Edition)
A quite practical guide to persuasion based on scientific insight. (***)
Bob Gill: LogoMania
I quite liked this booklet. In a witty, direct style it provides some insight into the art of design concepts. Interesting to anyone with a broad interest in communication arts. Gill demonstrates some fresh thinking. (***)
Malcolm Gladwell: Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
After the Tipping Point, this book is quite disappointing. The idea of Blink moments is interesting. But Gladwell doesn't make as strong a point as with the Tipping Point. His examples demonstrate both the accuracy as well as great failure of people to judge correctly in a blink. (**)
Seth Godin: Purple Cow
Triggered by All Marketers are liars, I expected a lot from this book. I found it a bit disappointing. After classics such as Eating the Big Fish, Blue Ocean Strategy and Disruption, Godin fails to add something significant. All American brand examples don't make it better for a European reader. (*)
Martin Lindstrom: Brand Sense
Maybe I expected too much of this book. I think there's more to sensory branding. Yet it contains a couple of comprehensive tools and pointers. (**)
Cooper: How to Plan Advertising
Although this book was written in the late eighties, most of its contents still hold true. A valuable source book for those who take strategic planning seriously. (****)
Robert Greene: Concise Art of Seduction
Recent brain research leads us back to the belief that seduction is stronger than argument. This booklet offers an inspiring overview of types of seducers and ways of secuction to get your thinking started. (**)
Crispin Porter + Bogusky: Hoopla
An entertaining book about an entertaining agency that turned branded entertainment into an art. I much admire these guys for their contribution to the (r)evolution in advertising. (***)
Sandy Thompson: One in a Billion: Xploring the New World of China
The true story of the unexpected pride and drive of the Chinese people, disclosed through a form of participating research called Xploring. (***)
Jon Steel: Perfect Pitch: The Art of Selling Ideas and Winning New Business
Must read for all those who sell ideas. And for agency planners - Perfect Pitch is a fantastic book on strategic planning in disguise. Best consumed in combination with 'Truth, Lies & Advertising'. (*****)
Tom Himpe: Advertising is dead, long live advertising
A very helpful inventory and analysis of an art that in full organic development: alternative advertising. Must read for any planner and creative. Full of inspiring examples. The only standard work on the subject I've spotted so far. (****)
Russell Ash: Top ten of everything
The ultimate book of lists. I got the 2007 version. Full of conversation pieces. (****)
Paco Underhill: Why We Buy: The Science Of Shopping
As with many true things, it all seems so simple and intuitive. Nevertheless this book is an eye opener. I will never see shops and shoppers the same anymore. (***)
Malcolm Gladwell: The tipping point
Cram full of interesting and fascinating stories. Gladwell doesn't provide instant solutions but very useful food for thought when you try to stimulate or stop things of epidemic proportion. (*****)
Scratch My Back: Special Edition
Peter Gabriel: Scratch My Back: Special Edition
This is so brilliant! I showed this clip as a starter in a lecture I gave recently on the Blogosphere and this set the tone very well. Although a bit technical for the average folk, this clip makes a much hyped issue very clear. A keeper!
Posted by: Wim Andrea | May 22, 2007 at 18:43