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What Would Google Do? by Jeff Jarvis
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What Would Google Do?

by Jeff Jarvis

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Showing 7 of 7
Best book on the subject by far
  GEPPSTER53 | Jul 16, 2009 |
If in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king, Jeff Jarvis contends Google jumped into the blind, half-realized world of Web 1.0 full-sighted and fully aware of the possibilities. Jarvis writes about the impact and power of Google the way a disciple follows a prophet - he's a smart, perceptive, at times skeptical disciple, but a disciple non-the-less.

Jeff Jarvis, a blogger, describes Google's groundbreaking business model - a business model based on fundamental changes in customer expectations and organization, the architecture of the internet, openness, ethics and economy. Jarvis doesn't write a history of Google, he writes a journalistic analysis of its culture from the outsider's perspective, a choice that hurt this books credibility. While Jarvis knows his Google: how Google rankings work, the widespread and at times pointed power of blogs, the mass of niche marketing - I wish Jarvis had a quarterly report. I wish he could point me to a webpage or newspaper article or Google PR report to explain those things. I don't require Jarvis to follow an academic's footnoted thesis, I just like to know where he got the knowledge. A book is a still a book, Jarvis, and it's not searchable or linkable, you said so yourself.

Jarvis spends the last half of his book re-imagining certain industries into Google-esque, internet-based free-markets. Jarvis is an unapologetic proponent of open-source anything, be it wine lists or GM-car design, and interconnecting as much of our lives into the computing cloud as possible. Jervis envisions restaurants where the customers affect the menu, peer-to-peer loans ala Kiva.org for banks, and a nebulous online-aggregated university process. His ideas strike a ring of truth, and sometimes a ring of fear - the old order slips away, the center of today's world will not hold. Jarvis has already found his battlecry: Long Live Google! Long Live the King!

Other Reviews & Original Words: http://motorcyclesshotguns.blogspot.c... ( )
  whiskeywaters | Jun 15, 2009 |
A great overview of a different way of doing business. This isn't just about Google. It is about how to rethink your own business model. If you don't like Google, skip the book. ( )
  BookListener | Jun 2, 2009 |
  Philhclark | Apr 18, 2009 |
What Would Google Do?
Jeff Jarvis
HarperCollins Publishers, New York
ISBN-978-0-06-170971-5

257 pages (hardback)

Jarvis (City of New York Graduate School of Journalism and founder of Entertainment Weekly) wraps a wide range of services and industries including law, manufacturing, and government within the context of - What Would Google Do? or WWGD?. Jarvis provides the perspective of his real world experience with other leaders in print and interactive media to show how services and industries will no longer survive and grow as exclusive gatekeepers of information. Google and the internet have simply changed market expectations – customers want and expect control over the choices they make. Google’s highly successful business model as developer of freely available information platforms focusing on client interaction allows them to dominate the new advertising marketplace. Jarvis demonstrates how other businesses can also flourish by focusing on customer and client dialogs and defining the scope of their services and products within niche markets. True to the question of WWGD?, Jarvis invites ongoing participation through his blog Buzzmachine.com – effecting an interactive conversation about the book. Well indexed and thought provoking, WWGD is highly recommended for public, academic, and business libraries. ( )
  oslib | Apr 15, 2009 |
Jeff Jarvis' What Would Google Do? is more of an exploration of innovative business and leadership practices than it is an examination of Google. My worry had been that Jarvis' book might spend too much time fawning over Google, but for the most part, he avoids that and even manages to briefly discuss such warts as the whole China issue.

Jarvis discusses how the world is becoming "googlier" in terms of becoming more networked, interactive, diffuse and innovative. The world of the future will be much more open to experimentation and even to acknowledged failure. In the future, we will need to listen to feedback much more closely than we have in the past and will also have to respond more agilely to these problems than we have in the past.

Jarvis also offers suggestions for how other industries can get their googliness on. He looks at banking, health care, education, government, restaurants, and the like.

The world he predicts will, from my perspective of education, be incredibly challenging. Schools tend to be rather traditionalist and authoritarian in their approach. Teachers have tended to act autonomously with little input from colleagues, students, or parents sought or expected. Teachers have been the source of all knowledge and authority. But as people come to expect different interactions with authorities, schools will be challenged.

I don't quite know how we'll respond to these trends. I don't know that most schools are thinking about them except as remote intellectual thought-exercises. But as I read about the decline of the publishing industry, the movie industry, newspapers, music, and the like, I think we're avoiding something we can't really avoid.

What Would Google Do? doesn't provide much in terms of specific answers, but it asks the right questions and provides some guideposts that we ignore at our own risk. ( )
  dmcolon | Feb 14, 2009 |
It's difficult to remember the Internet before Google. In just over ten years, the little company begun in a Menlo Park, California garage has grown into a globally-known giant. Its name has become a common verb. Its search engine is the world's primary link to exploring the Web. Some of its freely-shared tools have replaced resources that seemed indispensable a short time ago, and its other applications may be destined to do the same: Google Maps, Google Earth, Google documents, Chrome, G-Mail, Google Scholar, Picasa, and on and on. Google tools are certainly part of my daily life.

What made Google an unrivaled success in such a short time? How can other companies survive in a Google world? Media writer and blogger Jeff Jarvis thinks the best way to adapt to this tumultuous new world is to emulate the giant. In whichever industry, business, or organization you might be involved, Jarvis suggests you ask yourself the same question: "What would Google do? How might Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin approach your circumstance?

In What Would Google Do?, Jarvis presents his case in two parts. In the first half of the book, he describes the Google model as a means of explaining its success. Google seeks simplicity and effective results. It gives its products away, knowing well-used tools will keep people coming back for more. In many ways, Google offers itself as a platform for other people's creativity, realizing that people prefer controlling, manipulating, and tweaking the tools they use. Its corporate culture has been cited as a model for nurturing ideas, research (backed up by arguably the best data crunching on earth), and deployment. Even Google's apparent contradictions (e.g., a corporate giant with a start-up's metality, tight-lipped projects with a freeware face) add to its success.

With the Google approach described in the first half, Jarvis runs down a checklist of specific industries in the second half. He applies the Google philosophy to each. It's harsh at times, but the approach seems appropriate in the competitive business world. I found it intriguing, for example, each time he urged companies to step back and ask themselves what business they are in. Take newspapers. Are they in business to sell newspapers? Seems obvious, right? Are they stuck with newspaper or might they be in business to sell news -- regardless the medium? Perhaps they do best selling advertisements? How can they best supply an audience to their advertisers? Another example: airlines. Do airlines fly airplanes ... or move people? Companies should take a hard look at their defining product focus its resources there. If serving people is crucial to its bottom line, then it jolly well better offer quality customer service.

Jarvis also suggested being open to change and, if necessary, radical change. If a company's future lies in completely ripping apart and restructuring its product, it must do so. Hesitation could doom the company. Why? Because if there's a better way to do something, someone will eventually do it. Better you than a competitor, don't you think?

Jarvis gets wobbly with some of the industries. He's not equally familiar with all of them, but nevertheless tries to apply Google principles with mixed results.

The tumultuous changes he predicts/advocates was making me a bit wobbly by the end of the book, in fact. Every revolution he discussed could be imagined at the ground level as uprooted careers and job displacements for many people. Millions of them. I'm not saying Jarvis is wrong. He may be quite right. I just hope the ride into the Googlification of all business isn't as devastating to as many people as it seems. This was a provocative book.

[More of my reviews are available at http://mostlynf.wordpress.com ]
1 vote benjfrank | Jan 22, 2009 |
Showing 7 of 7

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