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Webonomics by Evan I. Schwartz β€” book cover

Webonomics

by Evan I. Schwartz
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Overview

The World Wide Web has become the most important new communications medium since television, with tens of millions of people now on-line and Web sites
springing up at the rate of one per minute. It has also created a digital marketplace where consumers can search for the best deals and services in an instant. While almost everyone agrees that the Web provides excellent marketing opportunities, many businesses don't know how to use it effectively and have been losing millions of dollars because of it.

In Webonomics, Evan I. Schwartz shows how the new Web economy mirrors the traditional economy in some ways but also exhibits entirely unique
properties of its own. Using numerous case studies of corporations such as IBM, Volvo, Playboy Enterprises, and Wells Fargo bank, as well as smaller companies and web-based start-ups, Schwartz documents both the tremendous failures and successes on the Web in a multitude of industries.

Defining nine essential principles for growing your business on the Web, Schwartz challenges the conventional wisdom and shows how using traditional
business approaches on the Web can backfire. Why are some products better suited to being sold on the Web than others? Why are certain brand names gaining status and how do you create and then reinforce yours? What are the new patterns of consumer behavior? Webonomics answers these questions and shows how to capture the only scarce commodity on this information-based terrain: the attention of the busy people who are spending time there. Putting the frenetic activity in a context, Schwartz delves into the new economic rules, new forms of currency, new ways to do businessglobally, and shows how to add value to existing products and build customer loyalty.

In addition to offering practical wisdom, Webonomics tells a larger story about life in the Information Age. It's about rising new communities, the next phase of capitalism, a shift in the role of government, and surviving amidst accelerating change, where only the most agile and adaptable businesses will thrive.

About the Author, Evan I. Schwartz

Evan I. Schwartz is a contributing writer for Wired magazine and a former editor at Business Week, where he covered software and digital media.  He has been the featured speaker at major corporations, business schools, and conferences.  Evan lives with his family in Brookline, Massachusetts.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Schwartz, a contributing editor of Wired magazine, has written the first marketing history of the World Wide Web. Though marketing successes and failures on the web have little history to offer, Schwartz has done a remarkable job of collecting the marketing experiences of companies that have entered this new medium. He introduces and supports new philosophies for web marketing in chapter titles such as "The Quantity of People Visiting Your Site Is Less Important Than the Quality of the Experience" and "Marketers Shouldn't Be on the Web for Exposure, but for Results." Readers will discover how web pioneers like Playboy and Volvo failed in their initial forays. Lucid, thoroughly researched, and packed with essential information, this work will serve as an indispensable resource for both blue-chip and mom-and-pop enterprises doing business on the Internet. Highly recommended for all academic and public library business collections.Dennis Krieb, St. Charles Cty. Community Coll., Wood River, Ill.

Book Details

Published
April 30, 1997
Publisher
New York : Broadway Books, c1997.
Pages
246
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780553061727

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