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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
For how-to, go All a Twitter and/or Twitter for Dummies.
For some interesting insights, get the others.
Just did an Amazon search and there are a ton more Twitter books. Just curious if you didn't review the others because they aren't worth it...or what. On paper, some of them look decent. Any thoughts on any of these others?
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss?url=search-al...
So I'm sure those books might also be good. I reviewed O'Reilly's "The Twitter Book" a few months back.
Anyway, great review -- love the condensed style and getting multiple reviews in one video!
First, the thought: I heard you describe more than one book as "interesting." Whenever I hear people use the words "nice" or "interesting" as adjectives, I recollect my 12th grade high school English teacher who warned us never to use those words as they describe everything and nothing simultaneously. My take is modifiers like "useful," "engaging," even "disappointing" are more accurate than "interesting." Soapbox off.
Second, I recall hearing you wrote or were profiled in a chapter of Twitterville. I don't know your involvement in the other books. It would be helpful if you could edit the above text to include a disclosure of such.
Great summary, otherwise. Thanks!
I also wrote the foreword of Tee's book and I also have had
drinks with 5 of the six authors.
Won't be editing for you, Ari. You and the rest of my community don't need "contents are hot" hand-holding.
And Chris, I second Ari's question. If you had involvement in these 6 books (or at least one of them), you should at least mention that since that's probably the reason you chose to review them (or people chose to send them to you as opposed to anybody else).
Aren't you on IZEA's board, the poster boys of "full disclosure"? ;)
1) Twitterville: I agree that Twitterville is an extremely thoughtful book written by a compelling story-teller in Shel (just reviewed Twitterville in detail on my blog and for MarketingProfs). It's packed with excellent case studies spanning government, business and education, a really good read.
2) TwitterPower: You didn't mention,TwitterPower but it's also a great book..perhaps the best written as far at tactics, strategies, etc.. I'm very deep in Twitter and teach workshops to b2b companies, but found myself reading some of these sections 2 or 3 times, loving these tips. Both of these are a must read for Twitter followers.
Thanks for sharing chris.
thanks for the reviews and insights.
I guess everyone wants to make money off of Twitter, but the space changes so rapidly that books are out of date by the time they are published.
Chris you should just tell everybody to use Twitter and they will discover the best uses. Trust Agents + Here Comes Everybody + Groundswell = A real social media education.
Margaret
http://businesseshome.net
Margaret
http://businesseshome.net