Our “book of book reviews” includes reviews of the following titles: Empowered (Josh Bernoff & Ted Schadler), Real-Time Marketing & PR (David Meerman Scott), The Mirror Test by (Jeffrey Hayzlett), The Dragonfly Effect (Jennifer Aaker & Andy Smith), and Content Rules (Ann Handley & CC Chapman).
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Eloqua book of book reviews
1. BOOK
REVIEW
COLLECTION
Our Favorite Books of 2010
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ELOQUA BOOK REVIEW:
Content Rules
Content Rules could be dubbed “the encyclopedia of
content marketing,” that is, if encyclopedias were (a.)
still relevant, and (b.) written by disorientingly upbeat
people.
Content Rules could be dubbed “the Bible of content
marketing,” if only comparing a business book to
sacred scripture didn’t counter-intuitively violate the
authors’ own guidelines (banned words #18: “offensive
phrases”).
So instead Content Rules is bucketed alone, which is,
frankly, exactly what it deserves. After all, it stands as
the single best book on the red-hot topic of content
marketing since, well, since content marketing became
a topic.
Blogging, consulting, marketing, reporting, entrepreneur-
ing, social media-ing powerhouses Ann Handley (of
MarketingProfs and ClickZ fame) and the omnipresent
CC Chapman teamed-up to bring us Content Rules, the
latest in marketing factotum David Meerman Scott’s
New Rules Social Media Book Series (published by John Wiley & Sons). Given the pressure to
produce something extraordinary, assembling a supergroup is slippery business. For every We
Are The World there’s a dozen Damn Yankees. I assure you, the output of the Handley/Chapman
collaboration is far closer to The Traveling Wilburys than it is to Power Station. (Ok, no more
supergroup references for the rest of this review. Promise.)
In some ways, I resent this book. After all, I’ve carved out a nice little niche for myself leading the
content marketing charge here at Eloqua, yet now anyone who reads Content Rules and puts the
authors’ counsel into practice can match me step-for-step. If it wasn’t for those meddling kids,
Handley and Chapman, I wouldn’t have lost my competitive advantage.
But my self-interests aside, this book should be cheered. It reads like a gift basket welcoming new
neighbors into the content marketing community. It is friendly, accessible, humble and genuinely
helpful. The authors love what they do, and they love that you are reading about how you can do
it, too.
Content Rules is essentially three books: an actual book, a how-to manual, and a resource center.
This three-books-in-one structure is a brilliant way to overcome what could have been the undoing
of Content Rules. You see, the book speaks to a menacingly wide audience – so wide, in fact,
that if the duo followed conventional wisdom and wrote for “the middle,” both hardcore content
marketers and the local merchant would be dissatisfied. Instead, the clever structure allows
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readers to zero in on the aspects that matter most to their businesses. Want to be an expert on
podcasting? There’s a section on that. Interested in learning how a business-to-business company
rocked the content marketing world? See the case study on Kinaxis. Looking to understand the
concepts that drive content marketing success? Check out the entire first section. Need to bone
up on your SEO skills? Just look at the book’s “optimized” subtitle: “How to Create Killer Blogs,
Podcasts, Videos, Ebooks, Webinars that Engage Customers and Ignite Your Business.” (Never
overlook your single most important reader: Google.)
It’s like opt-in reading.
Yet, regardless of the section you find yourself reading, the voice is consistent, the counsel is
valuable, and the stories are engaging. It’s not as if the publisher welded together three disparate
books. The structure is clearly by design, and it speaks well of the care and forethought that went
into all aspects of Content Rules.
While I will get to specifics in a moment, the most honest – and important – comment I can make
about Content Rules is this: I will be better at my job for having read this book. Ok, now onto the
fun stuff: quotes and tidbits from the authors.
• Marcus Sheridan of River Pools and Spa defines content marketing better than any social
media analyst or content marketing influencer ever has. He says, “I want our web site to be
an encyclopedia of pool buying.” Bingo.
• Reimagine; don’t recycle. This advice is thematic throughout the book. And it’s not only
eloquent, it’s also brilliant. Your readers (a.k.a. customers) deserve more than a new headline
placed over the same old text.
• Do something unexpected. This advice alone has had a massive impact on Eloqua’s business.
In fact, it nearly led me to begin this review with the out-of-nowhere sentence: “I have a
crush on Ann Handley.” But I rethought making that statement publicly.
• Start with an inventory of the content you already have. Exhibit A for Eloqua: The Social
Media Playbook. This tip works, really.
• Show, don’t tell. Yup. Along with “do something unexpected,” this tip has been a difference-
maker in my career. Take it seriously. Take it. Seriously.
• 18 business buzzwords we need to ban. Equal parts hilarious, squirm-inducing and
mandatory. Great stuff here.
• “Create 10 things out of one thing.” Perfectly stated by Kirsten Watson of Kinaxis. And
arguably the best advice in the entire book.
• “Share or solve; don’t shill.” I take the above bullet back. This is the best advice in the
book. (More on this tip in a moment.)
Moreover, Handley and Chapman tackle some of the thorniest topics in content marketing, like
“Should you put a form in front of your assets, or set them free?” and “Should you start with
one mammoth piece of content and smash it into pieces, or should you begin by creating smaller
pieces?”
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Arguably the strongest content in the book is the section that centers on webinars. The authors
dissect this content type with surgical precision, and they manage to make their point (“Too
many webinars promise great content, but the hosts don’t really push the speaker to deliver on
that promise.”) while making the reader laugh (“pitch slapped” is the act of being “sold” during
what was billed as an educational session). There’s also some really (really!) smart advice in this
section, like “go big or go tactical.”
There are, however, some areas in which Content Rules breezes over a topic that merits deeper
discussion. For example, the “share or solve; don’t shill” concept arises regularly, but the authors
stop short of offering examples of the dark side of content marketing. They give a good illustration
of bad copywriting (Sealy Posturepedic), but the example is not shilling per se, it’s just lousy
marketing. Readers would benefit just as much from learning what not to do as what to do, but
the book is, at moments, deliriously positive.
Measurement is similarly shortchanged. I imagine this absence is a byproduct of the broadness
of the book’s target audience. The wider the readership the more varied the objectives. A section
on KPIs different companies have assigned to their content marketing efforts would have been
helpful. Content marketing is so new that practitioners are more concerned with what they should
be measuring than how they should go about measuring it. The authors were in a unique position
to share at a very high level what types of benefits businesses are tracking against their content
programs.
Looked at another way, Content Rules might not be a perfect book, but it is a perfectly human
book. And if I were to reduce the counsel threaded throughout to one tip, it would be just that:
Be yourself, be human.
Success requires a blend of skill, timing and luck. Ann Handley and CC Chapman are clearly
two of the most skilled content marketers in the world, and their timing couldn’t be better (just
yesterday, after reading a Content Marketing Institute post, a CMO friend of mine wrote me to say,
“You are in a very good career lane.”). All that’s missing is luck. With a little luck this book will
be the smash hit it deserves to be. Sure, that means I’ll have a lot more competition … but don’t
forget that I also have Content Rules on my bookshelf.
Want to stay in touch with all of the companies and people mentioned in this book? Follow our
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ELOQUA BOOK REVIEW:
The Mirror Test
I didn’t think I was going to like this book. Not
because author Jeffrey Hayzlett isn’t smart (he is).
Not because Hayzlett isn’t a hell of a storyteller (he
is). But because of something the great poet and
novelist Charles Bukowski wrote in response to the
disappointment he sensed from the audience at his
live readings: “Writers write, they don’t speak.”
You see, my initial exposure to Hayzlett was at a
conference (the WOMMA School of WOM event) where
he proceeded to have me (and the rest of the crowd)
doubled-over in laughter one moment and scribbling
down unforgettable tips the next. So when I picked up
“The Mirror Test,” I thought, “Speakers speak, they
don’t write.”
While “The Mirror Test” isn’t exactly Hemingway (or
Bukowski for that matter), it is a rollicking, hard-
driving, unapologetic business book that basically
shakes the reader into action. And if you are in a
position of influence in your organization (especially
if it’s a start-up or small business), this literary kick-
in-the-ass is a very, very good thing.
Apparently many professionals are set to auto-pilot, and Hayzlett manages to scramble the control
panel, forcing the reader to identify who he is and why he is doing what he’s doing – and fast, like
before the plane hits the ground. In Hayzlett’s world, it would seem the greatest curse for a leader
is the absence of self-awareness.
The concept behind the book is simple: Is your business “fogging the mirror,” that is, is it
evidencing signs of life. Each chapter bum-rushes the reader through a different “test,” a different
dimension of business viability, and closes with a pointed question: “Are you fogging the mirror?”
At times I lost track of what exactly was being tested in any given chapter. I felt like I needed a
“you-are-here” map, like the ones in labyrinthine shopping malls. In that regard, the book was
like a meal prepared in a Slow Cooker: Delicious, though all the ingredients end up tasting the
same. Initially this frustrated me, but gradually I thought: Who cares? These stories are absolutely
brilliant, they are funny, they are poignant, and, most importantly, they are useful. Oh, and this
Hayzlett guy is plum nuts.
“The Mirror Test” is the chainsaw-artist of business books: not exactly high art, but way more fun
to look at.
Here’s what I mean:
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• Do you know who “Johnny Vegas” is?
• Can you recite your 118, convincingly?
• Are you running a pheasant farm?
• Have you ever liver-and-onions’ed your business?
• How many gravy-sucking pigs are eating away at your profits?
Like I said: Chainsaw.
But there is even some grace in power tool arts. You see, while Hayzlett has fun playing with his
bad-ass South Dakotan image, the guy’s got a point. Actually, he’s got lots of ‘em. And they are
pretty much all on-point. He’s merciless on business leaders who compete on price, he makes a
compelling case about a different type of ROI (“Return on Ignoring”), and he positively implores
readers to be themselves (albeit, more self-aware, more informed, more individualistic versions of
themselves). It’s like the scared straight program, but for business leaders.
My suggestion: Pour yourself a Diet Mt. Dew, kick your feet up on your desk and dig in. It’s 225
pages of tough love from a guy who could kick your ass, but, fortunately for you, chooses not to.
Want to stay in touch with all of the companies and people mentioned in this book? Follow our
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ELOQUA BOOK REVIEW:
Real-Time Marketing & PR
This is my third book review for the Eloqua “It’s All
About Revenue” blog, but before I get started, here’s
some related news: In November, the author, David
Meerman Scott, released a free e-book, titled: “Real
Time: How Marketing & PR at Speed Delivers Measurable
Success.“ The e-book is hosted on WebInkNow, David’s
blog. Go grab it. I was treated to a sneak preview, and
it’s nothing short of fascinating. The takeaway: Employ
real-time PR strategies, outperform your market. It’s
simply unambiguous. Now onto the review.
Let me begin with a caution: This book will shatter
your PR model. It will fracture it beyond recognition.
But rest easy. It will also put it back together again in
a vastly improved way.
The best ideas are those that are so simple, they
manage to hide in plain sight. Some of these discoveries
turn into landmark businesses (an online “yearbook”
for everyone in the world, a global auction, digital
classifieds), while others become concepts that alter
the way professionals think and act.
David Meerman Scott’s brand new book Real-Time
Marketing & PR (Wiley) is a shining example of the
latter. That is, David creates a business case for “immediacy” so ironclad that, in companies
across the world, “tomorrow” will soon become code for “too late.” And when that happens —
when communications professionals develop reflexive recognition of real-time opportunities —
“now” will become the call to arms for this generation of PR leaders (mercifully laying to rest
yesterday’s hackneyed “join the conversation” slogan).
Speaking of catch-phrases, David suggests companies begin replacing the term “social media”
(which is encumbered by the weight of triviality) with “real-time media.” He explains why in this
video.
Put another way, Real-Time Marketing & PR is as much a “movement” as it is a book. It marks the
moment companies stop viewing time as a shield (that is, hiding behind the clock for as long as it
takes to perfect a message) and begin seeing it as a sword. David cuts no corners in his veritable
“how-to” guide for turning time into competitive advantage.
The first thing you’ll experience when reading Real-Time Marketing & PR is a feeling of panic.
That is, the book’s case for immediacy is so persuasive that you may find yourself wanting to
read it faster. You will want to get started now. My advice: Read it in a captive, disconnected
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environment, like on an no-WiFi flight (United “offers” many). That way, there will be technical
guardrails to prevent you from putting it down, inchoate, and getting started prematurely on
your real-time PR plan. After all, right up to the very last page, the book is filled with examples,
insights and counsel you don’t want to miss, such as:
• “The successful organization is one that pushes decision-making as far down in the
organization as possible.” Absolutely brilliant insight into the day-to-day reality of a real-
time communications program. The model can only truly work if individual contributors are
empowered to act outside of the multi-layered morass of internal approvals.
• Think in terms of “their time” versus “your time.” One of the themes in Real-Time Marketing
& PR is the notion of responding on your audience’s schedule, not yours. In many ways this
is a companion mindset to “inbound marketing” — that is, to redirect your thinking from
your own solutions and to your buyers’ needs.
• “Social media are tools. Real time is a mindset.” Not only grammatically accurate (finally,
someone who recognizes “media” as plural!), but it’s also the mantra for the entire real
time movement.
• Real-world, real-time examples from United, Toyota, BP, Sky News, TMZ, Avaya and even
Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital.
Of course speed boats create massive wakes, and racing toward real-time presents a variety of
new and unanticipated challenges for marketers. Reading this book, I found myself thinking
about how much more important judgment becomes in the real-time era. In fact, one could argue
that the importance of an individual’s judgment is inversely proportional to the amount of time
afforded to planning a response.
Executives should also think about how they want to go about creating a culture that embraces
real time communications. Companies that strive for “perfection” will need to make concessions
— fast and perfect seldom co-exist — and organizations that reward top performers may want to
create a new award category.
To that end, it shouldn’t only be a must-read for marketing communications professionals, but,
perhaps even more importantly, the executives who chart corporate culture.
David Meerman Scott spoke at Eloqua Experience 2010 on the value of real-time marketing and
public relations. He serves on the Eloqua advisory board.
Want to stay in touch with all of the companies and people mentioned in this book? Follow our
Real-Time Marketing & PR Twitter list.
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ELOQUA BOOK REVIEW:
The Dragonfly Effect
When was the last time you read a business book that
made your eyes well up? Probably never (unless, of
course, you thought I meant tears of boredom – in
which case, the answer is probably: often). But The
Dragonfly Effect by Jennifer Aaker and Andy Smith
(Wiley, of course) will elicit an emotional response,
despite being anything but boring. In fact, in many
ways, it’s anything but a business book — after all,
it’s less about creating wealth through social channels
than it is creating richness through them. Richness of
relationships, richness of experience, richness of life.
(I assure you, the book itself is far less hokey than the
preceding sentence.)
Although I’d opened the book mindful of publishing
a review on this blog, I abandoned that mindset on
page 15. It’s on that page that the scribbled notes
in the margins shifted from “consider quote for lead”
to “check if stuffworthsupporting.org is available
for new blog” (it is) and “if I donated $25 per
stuffworthsupporting post, would that look vapid?” (It
would.) In other words, I stopped imagining this review
and instead began imagining ways I could implement
the authors’ suggestions.
Ultimately, The Dragonfly Effect is about embracing disruptive technology to make a difference
in the world, and, by extension, in one’s own life. At the risk of oversimplifying the distinguished
careers of the authors, Aaker is one of the world’s preeminent experts on our relationship with
“happiness,” while Smith is a tech-industry A-lister. Together they unwrap ways – immensely
practical, do-able ways – for each of us to enrich our lives, and the lives of those around us, by
employing the social Web to inspire others to support whatever it is we care most deeply about.
The Dragonfly Effect is an unconventional book inasmuch as it’s ostensibly about technology,
but really it’s about humanity. Technology, particularly social networks, is simply the connective
tissue between people. A corollary to the rule that the Internet provides a disproportionate
advantage to emerging companies, Aaker and Smith argue that by harnessing the very design of
social media, individuals, too, can have a disproportionate effect on the world around them.
Design? Yes. Design. You see, the authors liken social media to the dragonfly’s physique. (Does
an insect have a “physique”?) Apparently, according to the authors, thanks to the dragonfly’s
unique four-winged design, it is the only insect that can move briskly in any direction. This
physical structure serves as an extended metaphor throughout the book. Each chapter cleverly
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maps to an individual wing – Focus, Get Attention, Engage, Take Action – and, by exacting
command over each, the reader can move his cause in any direction, with the power and dexterity
of the dragonfly.
The writing itself is similarly unconventional. It contains stories that are positively heartbreaking,
and it tells them with a delicious combination of precision and emotion. It also is speckled with
“For Dummies”-like tidbits and how-to tips, making it feel more like a business title. Meanwhile
the helpful “voice,” charmingly simple flow charts and generous citations are reminiscent of a
textbook. There is even a dash of science (e.g., “And even the smallest act of kindness … can
result in a surge in dopamine.”). Honestly, I’ve never read a book quite like this. It is absolutely
fascinating in both substance and style.
Read it if you want to be smarter about social media; read it if you want to be smarter about
sociology. Read it if you want to learn something; read it if you want to feel something. Read it if
you want to change your organization; read it if you simply want change. Just read it. Because, I
assure you, there’s nothing else quite like it. (If your fall reading list is getting the better of you,
there’s always the Dragonfly Effect Blog, which is a useful starting point.)
Want to stay in touch with all of the companies and people mentioned in this book? Follow our
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ELOQUA BOOK REVIEW:
7 Reasons to Read
“Empowered”
I read Empowered: Unleash Your Employees, Energize
Your Customers, Transform Your Business (Josh Bernoff
and Ted Schadler, Harvard Business Review Press)
over a multi-leg trip that had me speaking on social
media from Toronto to Orlando. I was so engrossed in
the book that I found myself wanting to skip out on
my sessions and duck into a vacant room to furtively
knock off another chapter. It is pretty much that good.
(I also found myself wanting to scrap my deck and
instead persuade everyone in the room to become
highly empowered and resourceful operatives in their
organizations, or to support the HEROes on their own
teams.)
You see, most business books that center on social
media teach you how to swing a hammer. Josh Bernoff
and Ted Schadler show you where to place the nail. If
that metaphor works for you, “Empowered” will work
for you. If not, there are any number of tactical social
media books that will likely satisfy you more.
It’s also refreshing to read a business book that’s
written by someone with actual writing skills. The
disappointing reality is that most readers no longer
hold business writers up to much of a writing standard. They exist to deliver information, nothing
more. But “Empowered” is very well written – and not in a “in the land of the blind the one-
eyed man is king” kind of way. The pace, the voice, the word choice, the humility, that balance
of examples and counsel, the varied sentence structure, the personal disclosures all combine to
produce a very good book – not just a very good book … for a business title.
“Empowered” also respects the reader. Bernoff and Schadler know their audience, and, although
they are the ones imparting knowledge, the duo never writes down to the reader. It’s informative
absent pedantry.
But all the blogosphere loves a list, so to package this post up in a way that the Web prefers, here
goes. A list of the seven reasons you should read “Empowered”:
1. It’s funny: “Comments from your own Twitter feeds and content from your Facebook Pages
are catnip for [Mass Connectors].” Not your average metaphor.
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2. It’s purposefully visual: The visuals advance the reader’s understanding of the message
being conveyed. In most business books, graphics are employed to “prove” the content is
important (“look, it’s got a chart, this must be real!”). But not “Empowered.” The easy-to-
process illustrations complement and emphasize the companion text. As they should.
3. It’s actionable: In one chart I noted that 16% of software buyers express their opinions on
the web. Eloqua has 50,000 users. Now I have a lofty but measurable goal: How can I get
8,000 of our users to talk about our software? (Also, as I re-read dog-eared pages prepping
for this post, I found a note scribbled in a column: “Type this and paste to wall.”)
4. It’s fresh: There were a number of stories that were absolutely brand new to me (the NHL’s
use of tweetups, Philadelphia Eagles’ use of SMS, Black & Decker’s use of video, BBVA’s
use of blogs). And even the ones with which I was familiar (United Breaks Guitars, Comcast’s
sleeping tech, and Ford Fiesta), the freshness of the writers’ perspective made it valuable
to re-read the cases all over again.
5. It’s diverse: It’s remarkable how diverse the examples are. From global conglomerates like
IBM, to household brands like BestBuy, to industrial organizations like SunBelt Rentals, to
the smallest of small businesses like rentvillas.com, “Empowered” proves that not only can
HEROes make a difference in businesses of all sizes, but also that businesses of all sizes
can learn from one another.
6. It’s inspirational: The reader won’t walk away feeling intimidated or overwhelmed. Never
does the sentiment “you are too late” or “the industry has passed you by” emerge. Every
reader will walk away from this book feeling like there is still time to surf this wave, it hasn’t
crashed on a foreign shore just yet.
7. It’s right. Empowered employees allow companies to react faster, innovate smarter, serve
customers better, and, most importantly, drive changes deeper. Also the mantra “when
customers are empowered, customer service is marketing” jumped off the page. That
statement should be the battle cry of this generation of marketers.
Of course, one thing I learned when running communications at BzzAgent is that word of mouth
is less credible if it’s 100 percent positive. It’s in the thistle of criticism that peer referrals find
their power. So with that in mind, there was one item that didn’t quite work for me. I felt like
mobile was a little shoehorned into the book. This isn’t to say that mobile technologies aren’t
massively important – if anyone doesn’t think the handheld will be the dominant form-factor of
future communications, they should turn in their Web 2.0 membership card – but rather that
mobile seemed over-emphasized for this particular premise. To return to the opening metaphor,
it felt as if the mobile-related content was more about “swinging the hammer” than “where to
place the nail.”
That said, the authors’ knowledge of the mobile space is without rival. So even if that particular
chapter felt disjointed from the rest of the content, the reader still walks away with a deeper and
more current understanding of what is arguably the most important sector in technology. Not a
bad consolation prize.
Want to stay in touch with all of the companies and people mentioned in this book? Follow our
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Publishing & Social Media:
The Last Page Is Now The First
Reading a good book isn’t a passive experience. It’s something that grabs you by the lapels
and shakes you into thinking, feeling, even doing something in response. Over the past several
months, we cherry-picked five books that shook us into action. And we reviewed them to inspire
you to grab a copy yourself.
All five books – The Dragonfly Effect, Real-Time Marketing & PR, Empowered, The Mirror Test
and Content Rules – include fascinating stories involving compelling people, many of whom are
(conveniently) active in social media. So with that common tie, we created Twitter lists comprised
of every person and company mentioned in each book. In print, these characters informed and
fascinated us, but their stories don’t end on the last page. Follow these lists to keep up with the
personalities that made the books so remarkable.
Content Rules Twitter list
The Mirror Test Twitter list
Real-Time Marketing & PR Twitter list
The Dragonfly Effect Twitter list
Empowered Twitter list
For every book we review, we’ll also create a companion Twitter list for readers to follow. Social
media doesn’t spell the end for publishing; it offers new opportunities to continue the experience
long after the last page is turned.
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