How do you explain 292 pages of deep content in four and a half minutes? I was recently asked to review Brian Solis’ new book, The end of business as usual: Rewire the Way You Work to Succeed in the Consumer Revolution on the radio. It’s about social media and its impact on the new consumer landscape.
Here’s what I learned from it:
No escape
There is no escape. Technology is going very, very fast. Five billion people are connected online. The average age of the world population is now 28, which means that we are dealing with very social media savvy customers. Most buying decisions now have an online element.
Ego-system
As result of the evolution (revolution?) online, people are now becoming part ...
Today's biggest trends—the mobile web, social media, real-time—have produced a new consumer landscape. The End of Business As Usual explores this complex information revolution, how it has changed the future of business, media, and culture, and what you can do about it.
"To be successful in business, you need to see what others don't. Start with this book. Someone's going to do it, why not you?"
—Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks and Chairman of HDNet
"Innovation has always changed the business landscape. People expect to access information anywhere, anytime, and ...
Join this webinar to hear Brian Solis, author of The End of Business As Usual, reveal how to deliver customer experiences that will increase not only engagement but ultimately loyalty and advocacy.
Attendee Bonus: 100 randomly selected webinar attendees will receive a copy of Brian's book, The End of Business As Usual.
Attend this webinar to learn how to:
· Translate listening into learning and insights.
· Document the impact of disruptive technology on your business.
· Meet the needs of customers in ...
Brian Solis’ The End of Business as Usual is crucially important for individuals who live in our new digital culture. Digitalization has completely revolutionized how we live and do business. Nothing is as it was even a few years ago. Because of this, it is difficult for many people to keep up with the new culture that is evolving around them.
We are suffering from information overload in our businesses and lives. We are always plugged in to cell phones, computers, tablets, and other social media devices. Some of us prefer to communicate through these social devices rather through face-to-face interaction. Some of us are defined by the number of tweets we receive every day. And ...
Tra qualche giorno avremo il piacere di intervistare Brian Solis, marketing executive americano attualmente direttore di Altimeter Group.
Solis è riconosciuto a livello globale come uno dei più importanti thought leader e autori sui nuovi media. Analista digitale, sociologo e futurista, Solis ha studiato e influenzato gli effetti dei media emergenti sul business, marketing, editoria e cultura.
In Altimeter, Brian lavora con le aziende sulle strategie con nuovi media e le cornici per costruire ponti tra aziende e consumatori, dipendenti, e altri stakeholder importanti. In più, è specializzato nel cambio di management per aiutare le aziende (e le leadership team) a introdurre nuove risorse, sistemi e processi ...
How do you view your customers? Do you go around and create print ads, schedule media buys, develop websites and hope people will buy your products? Are you going out of your way to figure out what the trends are and are you evolving with them? If not, then you’ve already doomed your business to failure – or at least stagnate its growth.
The marketing world has long been focused on selling and influencing the way their products and information are being sent out. Long has this been the modus operandifor this industry and eventually you just grow suspicious about the motives of advertisements and pitches that come your way through the television, radio, newspaper, and even online. Businesses shouldn’t be ...
Most of us are suffering from information overload and people immersed in social media are no exception. Brian points out that for many people, the Web 2.0 approach to social networking was to befriend anyone and everyone. The early adopters often have huge networks and they get overloaded with the noise of it all. Ironically, they have become overloaded after keeping up with only a fraction of the data coming at them from their links, connections, friends, whatever term is used on that particular platform.
Pointing at the Circles concept in Google + (one I've been advocating ...
Best-selling author and renowned new media thinker Brian Solisdelivered a neatly-packaged glimpse into the future of public relations during his opening keynote address at the Public Relations Institute of Australia’s PR Directions national conference in Sydney this week.
Could Solis have jam packed any more information into his one-hour presentation? I think not. That said, social media and its effect on PR and marketing is a massive multi-headed beast of a subject, and so props to Solis for being able to paint such a broad (but vivid) picture within his allotted one and a bit hours.
It was perfect timing because he has only just released his new book: The End of Business As Usual (Rewire the way you work to succeed in the consumer revolution) and the theme of his presentation was more or less along these lines.
These quotes, from an interview with Solis that appeared ...



























