Guy Kawasaki combines insights from eastern philosophy with practical business advice on how to disrupt the market in favor of your company. Through strategic planning and zest for the game, companies can move in on their competitors' customers, credibility, and profit - and have a lot of fun in the process. This exhilarating book is packed with useful exercises, examples, interviews, and even a sampling of children’s literature. getAbstract recommends it to executives of big and small companies who want to shake up the marketplace, and to career-minded individuals eager to rise in the ranks and make their companies stronger.
Productive Disruption
“Driving your competition crazy” involves disrupting the existing marketplace. This disruption will not run your competition out of business; instead, executed properly, it will open new opportunities for you while squashing some of your competition’s advantages. Driving your competition crazy is essentially a deliberate process that can yield very tangible results.
A Firm Foundation
When people start talking about creativity and originality, they often stop thinking about the rules – which is fine, to a point. If you want to drive your competition crazy, you will need to foster a healthy sense of the unconventional, but lay a firm foundation first. To achieve this, try the following steps.
One: Find a Powerful Enemy
An enemy can be a positive or a negative force, depending on that enemy’s capabilities. Small or weak enemies will drain your energy instead of energizing you. They won’t force you to make yourself better. Find a fight and an enemy worth fighting.
A customer can only push you so far. The push of competitors has no limits. Competitors will incite your passion and provoke you to create a better product ...
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