Chelmsford Public Library

What would Google do?, Jeff Jarvis

Label
What would Google do?, Jeff Jarvis
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
What would Google do?
Oclc number
232977677
Responsibility statement
Jeff Jarvis
Summary
A manual for survival and success that asks the most important question today's leaders, in any industry, can ask themselves: What would Google do? To demonstrate how to emulate Google, Jarvis lays out his laws of what he calls "the new Google century, " including such insights as: Think distributed; Become a platform; Join the post-scarcity, open-source, gift economy; The middleman has died; Your worst customers are your best friends and your best customers are your partners; Do what you do best and link to the rest; Get out of the way; Make mistakes well; and more. He applies these principles not just to emerging technologies and the Internet, but to other industries--telecommunications, airlines, television, government, healthcare, education, journalism, and, yes, book publishing--showing ultimately what the world would look like if Google ran it. The result will change the way readers ask questions and solve problems.--From publisher description
Table Of Contents
Google rules -- New Relationship. Give the people control and we will use it -- Dell hell -- Your worst customer is your best friend -- Your best customer is your partner -- New Architecture. The link changes everything -- Do what you do best and link to the rest -- Join a network -- Be a platform -- Think distributed -- New Publicness. If you're not searchable, you won't be found -- Everybody needs Googlejuice -- Life is public, so is business -- Your customers are your ad agency -- New Society. Elegant organization -- New Economy. Small is the new big -- The post-scarcity economy -- Join the open-source, gift economy -- The mass market is dead; long live the mass of niches -- Google commodifies everything -- Welcome to the Google economy -- New Business Reality. Atoms are a drag -- Middlemen are doomed -- Free is a business model -- Decide what business you're in -- New Attitude. There is an inverse relationship between control and trust -- Trust the people -- Listen -- New Ethic. Make mistakes well -- Life is a beta -- Be honest -- Be transparent -- Collaborate -- Don't be evil -- New Speed. Answers are instantaneous -- Life is live -- Mobs form in a flash -- New Imperatives. Beware the cash cow in the coal mine -- Encourage, enable, and protect innovation -- Simplify, simplify -- Get out of the way -- If Google ruled the world -- Media. The Google Times: newspapers, post-paper -- Googlewood: entertainment, opened up -- GoogleCollins: killing the book to save it -- Advertising. And now, a word from Google's sponsors. -- Retail -- Google eats: a business built on openness -- Google shops: a company built on people -- Utilities. Google power & light: what Google would do -- GT&T: what Google should do -- Manufacturing. The Googlemobile: from secrecy to sharing -- Google Cola: we're more than consumers -- Service. Google Air: a social marketplace of customers -- Google Real Estate: information is power -- Money. Google capital: money makes networks -- The First Bank of Google: markets minus middlemen -- Public welfare. St. Google's Hospital: the benefits of publicness -- Google Mutual Insurance: the business of cooperation -- Public Institutions. Google U: opening education -- The United States of Google: geeks rule -- Exceptions. PR and lawyers: hopeless -- God and Apple: beyond Google? -- Generation G
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources

  • Has instance
    1