
Great Intro to Buzz Marketing - I found this book to be a great introduction to the idea of buzz marketing. Like its title suggest, Emanuel Rosen breaks down the elements and possibilities of buzz, and how information flows in our Web 2.0 society. Most helpful was his comment and illustrations of how traditional marketing can both stimulate and kill buzz, and the rules to following when integrating ad buys and buzz. Mr. Rosen offered some excellent examples, some we ve heard before, but are nonetheless powerful. Overall an interesting and thought-provoking book for anyone wanting to learn more about buzz marketing theory and implementation.
Great resource and starting point on Buzz Marketing. - I enjoyed reading this as it was one of the first books on Buzz that I d read. It s packed with lots of great examples, for example I discovered the history of the term Viral MarketingI was particularly happy, given my job (marketing board games), to find stories about Pictionary had been marketed.As to hard takeaways and actionable items, I m not so sure, but I have a feeling that most books on this subject lead you wanting more.At the end of the day creating buzz is highly subjective and non-scientific. You can try and make things Buzz-worthy and designing Buzz into products is a great objective - you d be mad to ignore this as its much harder to add these attributes later. Design your buzz into your product is great advice - adding it later is much harder.It s a really good starting point and its certainly not one of those books to jump on the Buzz wagon.
Material is outdated - Great book, but even after just a few years, the material is outdated. Hardly touches the online world, which is what I was looking for.
Listening to buzz - Have a great product (there is no substitute), identify the information hubs, seed far and wide, try to start little fires everywhere, and never give up - that s Emanuel Rosen s advice for creating buzz. The book is a light introduction to this topic, and deserves a spot on your reading list if you want to learn about the subject. However, it does feel outdated and you have to take this into account when you read it - YouTube, FaceBook, etc. have changed the rules of the game significantly. For a more recent, and dare I say, more useful read, be sure to check out Buzzmarketing by Mark Hughes.
How to Buzz your product - Rosen, Emanuel. The Anatomy of BuzzMarketing is greatly affected by word of mouth, person-to-person communication outside of mainline advertising. Mr. Rosen gives us insights into how and why buzz happens, and how to build buzz about a product or service. His Six Rules About Ads and Buzz:1. Keep It SimpleThe message needs to be simple in order for people to pass it on.2. Tell Us What s NewFluff doesn t travel well in the networks.3. Don t Make Claims You Can t SupportDon t tell customers that you care about them unless you really mean it and can consistently demonstrate superb customer service.4. Ask Your Customers to Articulate What s Special About Your Product or ServiceIf [your customers] can t tell you what s unique about your product, they won t be able to explain it to their friends.5. Start Measuring BuzzWhen you conduct customer satisfaction surveys, ask your customers whether they have recommended the product recently. If so, to how many people?6. Listen to the BuzzHow is the product being used out in the field? What problems are encountered by users? What are the product attributes being discussed?