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Viral Loop: From Facebook to Twitter, How Today's Smartest Businesses Grow Themselves

Viral Loop: From Facebook to Twitter, How Today's Smartest Businesses Grow ThemselvesAuthor: Adam L. Penenberg
Publisher: Hyperion
Category: Book

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 30 reviews
Sales Rank: 36871

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1

ISBN: 1401323499
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.872
EAN: 9781401323493

Publication Date: October 13, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"Adam Penenberg's lively book opens a window to all of our futures..."
--Ken Auletta, author of Googled: The End of the World as We Know It

"If you want to understand all things viral, this is the place to start. Penenberg's reporting gives us a ringside seat for some of the biggest viral success stories in history, from Tupperware to Ning."
--Dan Heath, co-author of Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die

"One of the most astounding things about the Web age is how the best advertising is often no advertising at all. Penenberg masterfully explains how this works with case studies of products that were designed to spread. Every product can use a dose of this technique; this is the book to get to learn how."
--Chris Anderson, author of Free: The Future of a Radical Price

"In tight, engaging prose, Adam captures the essence of the ever-scaling power of the virus. It's not just for geeks anymore."


--Seth Godin, author of Tribes

"Penenberg discovers the perpetual motion machine for business and marketing... Buy this book. Catch a virus. Make a fortune."
--Jeff Jarvis

"Penenberg has unlocked the secret to the most successful digital businesses. An indispensable read."
--Robert Safian, Editor-in-Chief, Fast Company

"Instead of entrusting your business to a guru with an agenda and a ghostwriter, you should be turning to a pro journalist like Adam Penenberg, who understands the way media and money interact, has the critical faculty to engage with these phenomena in an unbiased fashion, and the technical facility to explain them to you in an entirely engaging, informative, and actionable way."
--Douglas Rushkoff, author of Media Virus and Life Inc: How the world became a corporation and how to take it back.

Here's something you may not know about today's Internet. Simply by designing your product the right way, you can build a flourishing business from scratch. No advertising or marketing budget, no need for a sales force, and venture capitalists will flock to throw money at you.

Many of the most successful Web 2.0 companies, including MySpace, YouTube, eBay, and rising stars like Twitter and Flickr, are prime examples of what journalist Adam L. Penenberg calls a "viral loop"--to use it, you have to spread it. After all, what's the sense of being on Facebook if none of your friends are? The result: Never before has there been the potential to create wealth this fast, on this scale, and starting with so little.

In this game-changing must-read, Penenberg tells the fascinating story of the entrepreneurs who first harnessed the unprecedented potential of viral loops to create the successful online businesses--some worth billions of dollars--that we have all grown to rely on. The trick is that they created something people really want, so much so that their customers happily spread the word about their product for them.

All kinds of businesses--from the smallest start-ups to nonprofit organizations to the biggest multinational corporations--can use the paradigm-busting power of viral loops to enable their business through technology. Viral Loop is a must-read for any entrepreneur or business interested in uncorking viral loops to benefit their bottom line.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 30



4 out of 5 stars This book is not a manual for entrepreneurs, it tells entertaining stories but does little teaching   July 27, 2010
Serge Baduk (NY United States)
Mr. Penenberg provides an excellent overview of the latest phenomena of viral growth. It starts from the HotorNot anecdote, then the author analyzes the historical roots of the viral growth phenomena (Tupperware), and finally focuses on the 21-century success stories (Hotmail, Google, Facebook, PayPal, eBay, just to name a few). He defines the formula for required viral growth exponent in order to reach the ultimate form of non-displacement. The book is an interesting read for those of us who wonder about why and how the modern viral growth worked for Hotmail and Facebook, but it does not go deep enough for the entrepreneurs who may want to take their chances and apply the new approach.

With that said, I am not sure it is even possible at this stage to provide a methodical analysis of the viral growth phenomena and come up with a generalized patterns for implementation.



5 out of 5 stars Great book - Interesting histories mixed with a great view of a powerful force   July 16, 2010
Jeff Bennett (Bay Area California)
I really liked this book. I love when historical accounts surround an exploration of fundamental laws of nature. The viral loop is a powerful force and it recurs many times. We will see it many times again. May I be able to capture its force once on the web myself.


1 out of 5 stars NO Insight...reads like business section of National Enquirer   May 5, 2010
S. Y. KWON (Seattle, WA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I'm an Internet entrepreneur and very keen to learn new insight into viral marketing. In short, I was very disappointed with this book. Contrary to the title of the book, this book offers NO insight what so ever on viral marketing. It offers neither an anchoring framework as in "The Long Tail" by Chris Anderson nor witty / penetrating analysis as in most articles in The Economist.

Without all the gossipy & anecdotal stories, this books will be 30 pages at max. Examples given (Hotmail, Ning) are so over done in terms of unnecessary contextual details (e.g. Ning's founder once dating Marc Andreassen, TMI on Hotmail and Microsoft negotiation) that I felt like reading a newly created business section from National Enquirer.

I still managed to read 2/3 of the book hoping for some insight and found none. If the book was titled "Viral Marketing Success Stories: Hidden Factoids", I would not have been disappointed but probably never bought it either.



4 out of 5 stars A few gold nuggets on virality...   April 27, 2010
Shawn Bishop (San Diego, CA)
Although a lot of this book includes stories of how many of the big Internet companies got their start, it does contain invaluable information for any entrepreneur or marketer that is truly interested in making their Website go viral.

The book also conveys that successful "viral hooks" will also require the appropriate preparation for scalability. Unfortunately, there are not a lot of decent books that adequately explain how things truly go viral but this is undoubtedly one of them...



5 out of 5 stars Intriguing guide on how to use the Web's amazing viral potential   April 19, 2010
Rolf Dobelli (Switzerland)
In 2000, the "Naked Scientists," a group of Cambridge University physicians and researchers who popularize science, satirically described the viral path of an odd growth industry: Elvis Presley impersonation. At that time, more than 85,000 Elvis impersonators actively performed around the world, "compared to only 170 in 1977 when Elvis died." The Naked Scientists jovially argued that, at that rate of growth, "by 2019, Elvis impersonators will make up a third of the world's population." Of course, this is deliberately ridiculous, but "viral growth" is not. Just note the astounding expansion of such Internet juggernauts as YouTube, Google, Ning and Facebook. Indeed, based on Facebook's remarkable current popularity, it is not inconceivable that everyone on the globe with an Internet connection could be a Facebook member in 30 years. What accounts for such incredible growth? If you want an answer to that question, getAbstract recommends Adam L. Penenberg's absorbing and detailed (perhaps too detailed) book. He examines this timely subject with a focus on the Web's ability to foster sites that are social trendsetters and economic powerhouses.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 30


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