Home

Tags: amazon books

Tuned In: Uncover the Extraordinary Opportunities That Lead to Business Breakthroughs Hardcover – June 30, 2008

http://www.amazon.com/Tuned-Extraordinary-Opportunities-Business-Breakthroughs/dp/047026036X

amazon–stars–4-5.png  | 4.7 out of 5 stars  | 38 customer reviews

$21.49

Images

41AwTeyERYL.jpg51z-LzX6s5L.jpg31cEJhF1wtL.jpg

Book Description

If you market a product, service, or idea in any business, industry or organization, you must read Tuned In: Uncover the Extraordinary Opportunities That Lead to Business Breakthroughs, a guide to understanding and meeting the needs of consumers, whether or not they make those needs clear. An easy-to-follow six-step process developed over the past 15 years can help you address unsolved problems, recognize buyer personas, quantify impact and create breakthrough experiences. Stop wasting time by guessing what your market needs and start understanding consumer desire.

Product Description

“…helpful summaries…lively read for sales and marketing departments” (Training & Coaching Today, September)

Customer Reviews

3 stars for the content, 5 stars for the examples; 3.5 stars altogether

amazon–stars–3.png  | By Jean-Claude Balland on July 15, 2008

Remove the examples from the book, and you have for the most part a collection of already known high level concepts without much depth. Granted, marketing does not have to be complicated and it should not be, but creating innovative products requires more than concepts. For example, the first step in the authors' Tuned-in “process” is “Find unresolved problems”. OK, good point, but I knew that and you probably did know that too! How do I do it? The authors’s advice: “ask the customers”! But I knew that too. Tell me more. “Ask your non-customers”. Wow,I would never have thought of that. Tell me more. “Go to trade shows” say the authors. I knew that too. Tell me more. “Ask open questions”, “Keep an open mind”, etc. say the authors. At the end of this chapter and of most chapters, I fell frustrated of not learning approaches or tips I have not heard about before and of not learning more how to do it.

At the end of Chapter 4, I was going to drop the book, but the examples kept me going. There are at least 50 examples of Tuned-in companies from Disneyland to the Maganavox remote control that locates itself to the ubiquitous iPod. These examples are interesting by themselves. They are spread through the book to illustrate each step and to validate the entire tuned-in “process”.

I keep putting process in between quotes because what the authors present is not really a process. It is more a framework. In addition, it seems that not one of the examples was actually the result of applying the authors' framework under their guidance. So the whole edifice is an after-the-fact analysis of successful innovations that serves to justify the author’s framework. I would have liked to see at least one example of a product that the authors actually helped develop. Read more ›

The return of common sense marketing

amazon–stars–5.png  | By Brad Shorr on June 20, 2008

Why did the Apple Newton flop and the iPod rock? How did a struggling magician transform himself into a success with a three-word tagline? How did a car rental startup grab an entire market segment that was just sitting there for the big guys to gobble up? Answer: it was all a matter of tuning in.

It stands to reason if an organization wants to develop products and services that resonate with people, the first step is to ask people what they want. Simple as it sounds, authors Stull, Myers, and Scott, each of whom has extensive experience working with large firms and non-profits, observe that many of them simply don’t do it. Those that do often lack the right processes to gather and act upon the information they receive. As a result, they roll out products and services that fall absolutely flat, squandering their resources and completely missing golden opportunities.

The authors contend the solution is to tune in. Instead of selecting new product initiatives in ivory tower executive suites and developing them in the lab, get to the grass roots. Talk to actual people, uncover their most urgent needs, and craft solutions. This strikes me as an incredibly sensible approach; perhaps that is why big companies are apt to overlook it.

The book focuses on the why and how of tuning in, with emphasis on the how. The authors lay out a 6-step process for tuning in, very detailed yet written in plain English every reader will understand -

  1. Find unresolved problems

  2. Understand buyer personas

  3. Quantify the impact

  4. Create breakthrough experiences

  5. Articulate powerful ideas

  6. Read more ›

Tuned In

amazon–stars–5.png  | By F. Stanton Sipes on June 22, 2008

Whether starting a business, attempting to grow an existing corporation, or leading a product management division, the most vital question that must be answered is whether your product or service is solving a problem or providing something so unique that is important enough that people will pay for it.

The authors of Tuned In give us encouragement that we can not only return our culture to one that is truly “Tuned In” to our customers, but they also give us a blueprint to sustain that focus. Most companies start with a great idea that comes from an entrepreneur that is listening intently to the marketplace, and creates a company around a solution or product. If they are lucky, those companies grow and prosper around that ability to solve the market’s problem or fill a need. More often, though, the market changes, and if we dont change with our customers needs, we will be left to guessing what those customers need, and we will spend enormous amounts of money in advertising trying to convince our market that they need our product.

This book brings us face to face with that reality, provides a process to begin to move back in line with our market, and gives we as business leaders a renewed focus on that aspect of our culture. Solving a problem or providing a product that our customers want is our sole reason for being, is it not? Tuned In will take it’s place as one of the great books that brings us back to the basics in business, and it will be a must read for any entrepreneur, business leader or marketing exec for years to come.


Tags: amazon books

Home