
Tim Manners
Author of Relevance: Making Stuff That Matters
Works by Tim Manners
Associated Works
The Big Moo: Stop Trying to Be Perfect and Start Being Remarkable (2005) — Contributor — 431 copies, 7 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
The main idea of the book is that if a business can become relevant to consumers, then that business can thrive. I think that's a great take on branding and was enough of a germ of an idea to get me to pick up the book. But the book never really grew from there, for me.
After some basic "problems with the business mindset" kind of stuff, Manners presents six "Relevant Solutions". These are insights, innovation, investment, design, experience and value. Do any of these ideas sound new to you? show more Me either.
The book is mainly a series of "stories from the field" as various business folks relay their experiences with their brands. Of course, Apple is there and the car manufacturers. Manners did seek out Patagonia, who I thought had the most valuable insights in the book. They seem to concentrate on growing inside each sales channel, rather than chasing the Nike's of the world. So that was cool. After many of the from-the-trenches stories the author adds a bullet point to try and sum up the story. Many of which seem kind of generic and dated.
So while, in this internet-empowered era I do think businesses must work hard to serve each and every customer and bring value to their product, in essence, become relevant, I'm hoping to find more books out there that might delve a little deeper into each of Manners "Relevant Solutions". show less
After some basic "problems with the business mindset" kind of stuff, Manners presents six "Relevant Solutions". These are insights, innovation, investment, design, experience and value. Do any of these ideas sound new to you? show more Me either.
The book is mainly a series of "stories from the field" as various business folks relay their experiences with their brands. Of course, Apple is there and the car manufacturers. Manners did seek out Patagonia, who I thought had the most valuable insights in the book. They seem to concentrate on growing inside each sales channel, rather than chasing the Nike's of the world. So that was cool. After many of the from-the-trenches stories the author adds a bullet point to try and sum up the story. Many of which seem kind of generic and dated.
So while, in this internet-empowered era I do think businesses must work hard to serve each and every customer and bring value to their product, in essence, become relevant, I'm hoping to find more books out there that might delve a little deeper into each of Manners "Relevant Solutions". show less
This is a great collection of numerous stories that get to the essence of branding and relevance. While it may get repeative along the way, there are gems burried in each page. Read until your head is overflowing with ideas, then pick it up again.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 34
- Popularity
- #413,652
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 4
