10/30/08: Personal Branding News and Recommendations

October 31, 2008 at 11:22 am | In Book Reviews, People, Personal Branding | 5 Comments

News

There is still time to get the free sample issue of Personal Branding Magazine, starring Gary Vaynerchuk, David Allen, Keith Ferrazzi and Robert Cialdini.  If you would like to subscribe to get your full issue on November 1st, it’s $12.95 per year to get 4 issues. 50% of proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society.

Free eBook

My friend Chris Ferdinandi is a Gen-Y star in the area of HR. He just released his first free eBook called “Pushing Performance.” It is a step-by-step guide to driving individual and organizational performance. In order to receive your own complimentary copy, you should go subscribe to his blog. Chris’s blog is called “Manager’s Sandbox,” which was developed to help HR professionals create a more productive and successful workforce.

As many of you already know, HR is represented as one of the 8 arms in my famous Octopus Model of Relevancy Model, which is also one of the cores concepts in my book. In Chris’s book, you will learn the basics of HR and how to get motivated and stay motivated at work!

Book review

Tribes, by Seth Godin

The best part about world recognized brands is that you don’t have to introduce them. Instead of wasting time telling you that Seth is a bestselling author many times over and that his blog is #1 on AdAge150, I’d rather tell you about a book that I feel will change your life. I do see a few synergies in my new book, Me 2.0, relative to Tribes, such as the idea of personal empowerment and leadership to be successful. Seth’s writing technique is very powerful and fun!

First, I’d like to go over how Seth marketed this book, then I’ll reveal my favorite segment of the book, which I read at midnight last night.

Seth Godin’s million dollar “relationship” marketing plan

  • Created preliminary book buzz with a few blog postings
  • Established a teaser and community dedicated to the ideas in the book
  • Asked blog community for their pictures to include on the inside cover (Picture to the right: I’m pointing to my avatar on the inside cover)
  • Send his book out, via Penguin PR (most likely), to traditional press and bloggers
  • Setup a teleseminar book tour with fellow brands Dan Pink, Keith Ferrazzi and Pam Slim.

Book excerpt – Scott Beale’s Party, Pg. 37

“Here’s a simple example of a tribe enabled by new technology. Scott Beale is an impresario with a long history of innovation and leadership. His company, Laughing Squid, does everything from Web hosting to T-shirts, from laser engraving to arts listings. In short, he leads an eclectic tribe.

At the SXSW conference in 2008, Scott got tired of waiting in line to get into the Google party. So he walked down the street, found a deserted bar , grabbed some tables in the back, and fired up his cell phone. Using Twitter, he announced: “Alta Vista Party at Ginger Man.” Within minutes, eight people showed up. Shortly thereafter, fifty. Then there was a line out the door.

. . . . It’s important to note that Twitter merely enabled the event; it didn’t cause it to occur. Unless Scott had earned the respect and permission of the tribe that follows him, he would have been all alone at the bar. The party didn’t take four minutes to organize; it took four years.”

Other book recommendations

World Wide Rave by David Meerman Scott

David seems to publish at least one book a year now and it certainly inspires me and pushes me harder to make my first book a success. His latest book sounds incredible! In World Wide Rave, David reveals the most exciting and powerful ways to build a giant audience from scratch.

A World Wide Rave is when people around the world are talking about you, your company, and your products. It’s when communities eagerly link to your stuff on the Web. It’s when online buzz drives buyers to your virtual doorstep. It’s when tons of fans visit your Web site and your blog because they genuinely want to be there.

Age of Conversation: Why Don’t They Get It?

A while ago, a few of my close friends in the blogosphere, Drew and Gavin, got a hundred bloggers to all write a chapter each of a book and then sold the book for Variety the Children’s Charity. It was called the Age of Conversation. The book was so successful that they pooled their network together, which is over twice as big now, to include 237 authors from 15 countries. The result is the Age of Conversation 2, which went on sale this week. You can go buy it right now.

I was one of those authors and my chapter is something you just can’t miss out on. It’s called “Life in the conversation lane – eBranding for the masses.” I’ll let you use your imagination or credit card to learn more ;)

Look at all the other people who wrote chapters:

A Adrian Ho, Aki Spicer, Alex Henault, Amy Jussel, Andrew Odom, Andy Nulman, Andy Sernovitz, Andy Whitlock, Angela Maiers, Ann Handley, Anna Farmery, Armando Alves, Arun Rajagopal, Asi Sharabi
B Becky Carroll, Becky McCray, Bernie Scheffler, Bill Gammell, Bob LeDrew, Brad Shorr, Brandon Murphy, Branislav Peric, Brent Dixon, Brett Macfarlane, Brian Reich
C C.C. Chapman, Cam Beck, Casper Willer, Cathleen Rittereiser, Cathryn Hrudicka, Cedric Giorgi, Charles Sipe, Chris Kieff, Chris Cree, Chris Wilson, Christina Kerley (CK), C.B. Whittemore, Chris Brown, Connie Bensen, Connie Reece, Corentin Monot, Craig Wilson
D Daniel Honigman, Dan Schawbel, Dan Sitter, Daria Radota Rasmussen, Darren Herman, Dave Davison, David Berkowitz, David Koopmans, David Meerman Scott, David Petherick, David Reich, David Weinfeld, David Zinger, Deanna Gernert, Deborah Brown, Dennis Price, Derrick Kwa, Dino Demopoulos, Doug Haslam, Doug Meacham, Doug Mitchell, Douglas Hanna, Douglas Karr, Drew McLellan, Duane Brown, Dustin Jacobsen, Dylan Viner
E Ed Brenegar, Ed Cotton, Efrain Mendicuti, Ellen Weber, Eric Peterson, Eric Nehrlich, Ernie Mosteller
F Faris Yakob, Fernanda Romano, Francis Anderson
G Gareth Kay, Gary Cohen, Gaurav Mishra, Gavin Heaton, Geert Desager, George Jenkins, G.L. Hoffman, Gianandrea Facchini, Gordon Whitehead, Greg Verdino, Gretel Going & Kathryn Fleming
H Hillel Cooperman, Hugh Weber
J J. Erik Potter, James Gordon-Macintosh, Jamey Shiels, Jasmin Tragas, Jason Oke, Jay Ehret, Jeanne Dininni, Jeff De Cagna, Jeff Gwynne & Todd Cabral, Jeff Noble, Jeff Wallace, Jennifer Warwick, Jenny Meade, Jeremy Fuksa, Jeremy Heilpern, Jeroen Verkroost, Jessica Hagy, Joanna Young, Joe Pulizzi, John Herrington, John Moore, John Rosen, John Todor, Jon Burg, Jon Swanson, Jonathan Trenn, Jordan Behan, Julie Fleischer, Justin Foster
K Karl Turley, Kate Trgovac, Katie Chatfield, Katie Konrath, Kenny Lauer, Keri Willenborg, Kevin Jessop, Kristin Gorski
L Lewis Green, Lois Kelly, Lori Magno, Louise Manning, Luc Debaisieux
M Mario Vellandi, Mark Blair, Mark Earls, Mark Goren, Mark Hancock, Mark Lewis, Mark McGuinness, Matt Dickman, Matt J. McDonald, Matt Moore, Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Michelle Lamar, Mike Arauz, Mike McAllen, Mike Sansone, Mitch Joel
N Neil Perkin, Nettie Hartsock, Nick Rice
O
Oleksandr Skorokhod, Ozgur Alaz
P
Paul Chaney, Paul Hebert, Paul Isakson, Paul McEnany, Paul Tedesco, Paul Williams, Pet Campbell, Pete Deutschman, Peter Corbett, Phil Gerbyshak, Phil Lewis, Phil Soden, Piet Wulleman
R
Rachel Steiner, Reginald Adkins, Richard Huntington, Rishi Desai, Robert Hruzek, Roberta Rosenberg, Robyn McMaster, Roger von Oech, Rohit Bhargava, Ron Shevlin, Ryan Barrett, Ryan Karpeles, Ryan Rasmussen
S
Sam Huleatt, Sandy Renshaw, Scott Goodson, Scott Monty, Scott Townsend, Scott White, Sean Howard, Sean Scott, Seni Thomas, Seth Gaffney, Shama Hyder, Sheila Scarborough, Sheryl Steadman, Simon Payn, Sonia Simone, Spike Jones, Sreeraj Menon, Stanley Johnson, Stephen Collins, Stephen Landau, Stephen Smith, Steve Bannister, Steve Hardy, Steve Portigal, Steve Roesler, Steven Verbruggen, Steve Woodruff, Sue Edworthy, Susan Bird, Susan Gunelius, Susan Heywood
T
Tammy Lenski, Terrell Meek, Thomas Clifford, Thomas Knoll, Tim Brunelle, Tim Connor, Tim Jackson, Tim Mannveille, Tim Tyler, Timothy Johnson, Tinu Abayomi-Paul, Toby Bloomberg, Todd Andrlik, Troy Rutter, Troy Worman
U
Uwe Hook
V
Valeria Maltoni, Vandana Ahuja, Vanessa DiMauro, Veronique Rabuteau
W
Wayne Buckhanan, William Azaroff
Y
Yves Van Landeghem

5 Comments »

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  1. Dan,
    Thanks for always bringing valuable information to your blog community

  2. The e-book thing is great and congrats on your chapter in there. I’ve just started the “Tribes” book by Seth Godin, I downloaded the audio version for free when he was running that promotion so hopefully I like it as much as you did. I need to check out that book “Word Wide Rave”, very cool.

  3. Dan,

    Thanks for telling your readers about Age of Conversation 2. It’s a great read with plenty of thought provoking ideas.

    Drew

  4. Dan, thanks for getting the word out about AOC2. What a project and what a book! I look forward to reading your chapter. Congratulations, too, on all of your exciting undertakings. You are inspiring.

  5. Dan, I’m slow to post this round, but what a fabulous way to think of AOC2 as a ‘tribe,’ eh? I’ve been trying to decide my ‘angle’ for the first round, as I usually write about it a few times…and since I’ve been doing so much grant app work on ‘participatory learning’ I think that’s my direction…as AOC2 itself accomplishes just that…where the sum parts as a whole are greater than any single POV.

    By jove I think I’ve got it! ;-)

    Posting soon, best, Amy
    http://www.shapingyouth.org


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