13 January 2008

Further reading: notes and bibliography

Bibliography screenshotAt university, my supervisor used to say that he would always read the references at the end of a research paper first. His reasoning was that this gave you an easily skimmable indication of both the coverage of the paper and its influences. I'm not sure that many people share this attitude, but if you do, you'll be interested to see that I've put both of the Notes and the Bibliography of Net, Blogs and Rock'n'Roll online.

It's probably more likely that you'll find these useful if you're one of the growing masses who have read the book, and would like easy connections to the articles and books that I mentioned in it. The notes are all hyperlinked, so you don't have to copy out URLs from the back of the book, just click the link to go there directly. Ditto with the bibliography, which has links to further details of each book on LibraryThing and Amazon.com.

02 September 2006

Earning commission on word-of-mouth recommendations: Amazon aStores

Astore_1Word-of-mouth is a powerful and effective way of promoting products. You can't control it, but can you encourage it and harness its energy?

One of the things that makes word-of-mouth effective is that it's perceived to be based on authentic and commercially disinterested opinion. So, as soon as you sense that I stand to profit from you acting on my recommendation, you become more wary of my recommendation and less likely to act on it. (I've written about this in the context of blog marketing on my DJ Alchemi blog.)

In the music area, a couple of initiatives have started, with mixed receptions. Weedshare has been running a scheme for several years now, which encourages you to share digital music files with your friends by email, instant messenger or your website. They can listen to each file three times for free, but then have to pay to enable unlimited plays. If they do pay, you get a commission. It seems like a transparent model, and fairly simple in broad outline (though I think it gets complex in the details). The Digital Music News blog and associated comments give a mixture of opinions. It's fair to say that Weedshare hasn't exactly taken off and hit the mainstream, but that's possibly because (a) it has no major label music, (b) it uses Windows Media files (incompatible with iPods) with DRM, and (c) on the receiving end, illegal peer-to-peer sharing is more attractive, because there's no payment.

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03 August 2006

Dating and discovery (and snobbery)

Books: odd one outThe Guardian's blog reports a survey suggesting that people may be better disposed to smiling at or talking to people who they see reading a well-respected book. 'Well-respected' in this context apparently means the classics (e.g. Thomas Hardy or Jane Austen, as long it doesn't have a 'now a major TV series' splash on the cover), followed by modern literary fiction like Zadie Smith. Dan Brown and John Grisham are, apparently, the book-snooping equivalent of garlic breath: a turn-off unless the other person has read/eaten them recently too.

According to this account of the YouGov study, 2% of respondents — and 4% of men — had asked a stranger on a date after liking the look of their book, while 6% had asked the readers personal questions.

If you discover people via the sophisticated books they read, can you also discover books via their attractive readers? My instinct is that you can. One no-messing, pragmatic comment on The Guardian's blog puts it, "Anyone who leaves the '3 for 2' stickers on their books is a no-no. But let's face it, if someone's fit you'll give them the benefit of the doubt anyway." So if you were initially wary of the latest Douglas Coupland, but you saw someone you fancied reading it on your regular commute to work, that might give you the nudge you needed to read the book after all.

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