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SugarCon 08 Rocks

  • CEO of SugarCRM Speaks to Investors
    This gives you a flavor of what SugarCon 08 was all about. It was like a high tech lovefest. Children of the 60s and the 90s and the millennium would be happy here.

Recommended CRM Readings

  • C. K. Prahalad: The Future of Competition: Co-Creating Unique Value with Customers

    C. K. Prahalad: The Future of Competition: Co-Creating Unique Value with Customers
    This is great stuff on co-creation of value. Take this book, mix it with The Experience Economy, a dash of CRM at the Speed of Light and the future is ours, man!!! (*****)

  • B. Joseph Pine II & James Gilmore: The Experience Economy

    B. Joseph Pine II & James Gilmore: The Experience Economy
    This is a groundbreaker, folks. One that you should be reading right now. Go. Shoo. Go get it now. It is affecting you as you read this, whether or not you know that. Seminal work on what has been a transition to a new type of economy. (*****)

  • Christopher Locke, Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Rick Levine: The Cluetrain Manifesto

    Christopher Locke, Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Rick Levine: The Cluetrain Manifesto
    If this book didn't spend so much time proclaiming its manifesto and explained it a little more, it would be a disruptive innovation unto itself. It is a powerful and often metaphorically lovely book about the new customer a few years before that customer even knew it was what the cluetrain crew train said it was. A great book but strident as hell. This was a more important book than many realize it was. Or is. (****)

  • Naras Eechambadi: High Performance Marketing

    Naras Eechambadi: High Performance Marketing
    If marketing is something you do, then this book is something you read. Not only does this dynamic book look at marketing in a contemporary fashion - with the customer at the center - but it also helps you figure out how to (finally!) measure your activities and results. A genuinely refreshing brace of business thinking in a field that needs it. (*****)

  • Shoshana Zuboff: The Support Economy

    Shoshana Zuboff: The Support Economy
    This is a revolutionary book. I love this book (partially because it validates everything I say :-)) because it recognizes that the "enterprise logic" of managerial capitalism is no longer sufficient to interest a consumer who is trying to control his/her own value. There's so much more.... (*****)

  • James G. Barnes: Secrets of Customer Relationship Management: Its How You Make Them Feel

    James G. Barnes: Secrets of Customer Relationship Management: Its How You Make Them Feel
    This is a you gotta read, read. Jim is a board member of CRMGuru, has won numerous academic honors, is a real world CRM consultant, runs marathons, and can write up a storm. He thinks out of the box and then provides approaches to how you can. This book is undegoing updating but is well worth it as is. Get it. Now. What are you waiting for? Hurry up!! (*****)

  • Jill Dyche: The CRM Handbook

    Jill Dyche: The CRM Handbook
    The ultimate guide to implementation of CRM. This book is about as practical as it gets. Just lays it right out and boom, you should have an idea of what you have to consider when it comes to CRM. (*****)

  • Paul Greenberg: CRM at the Speed of Light

    Paul Greenberg: CRM at the Speed of Light
    This is the best book on CRM EVER written. So I say. And it is written by me and so I pass judgment on myself. (*****)

  • Donna Fluss: The Real-Time Contact Center

    Donna Fluss: The Real-Time Contact Center
    As Donna points out, this is an ironic title. All contact centers are already "real-time." None the less this is both cutting edge and definitive and reading it is a must (*****)

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« Kicking It With Social CRM and Media in Plymouth Meeting PA | Main | VRM v. CRM 2.0 - For Real Difference or Not »

April 27, 2008

Aggregating Some Ideas and Products For Aggregating

Further (and new) thoughts on a few items:


  • For CRM 2.0 to be successful, I've been continually making the point that the company has to change its business model from being a provider of goods and/or services to an aggregator of products, services, tools and experiences that allow the customer to personalize the kind of relationship and the experience that they have with the company. What makes this important is the same thing that makes a PC important to someone's life - a means to give someone a sense of control over their own life. Ultimately, that's what we all are looking to have and what makes us advocates of something is that they treat us in a way that gives us the intelligence and knowledge to extend that control over our own life. For example, that's why things like social network aggregators are as important as the social networks in this new world. Take a look at Cerado's Ventana, a creation of Chris Carfi's (he's all OVER this entry isn't he? He's an important social thinker AND doer which is why he is all over this blog). The pix here will give you an idea how it works:

What makes it important is that it is device-aware (can show it on your iphone) and is aggregator of multiple social activities. You can coherently and in a single place either online or on a mobile device, look at your Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Twitter, etc. accounts and see all the joint activity going on and respond accordingly. OR you could do what you see here with the BlogHer Guide to Political Bloggers- here is an aggregation of what is now over 150 women in politics who have blogs and here is a single screen (or conjoint set of screens), mobile or online that you can see all the women who are politically blogging through BlogHer and (note the "News" tab) you can see what's new and what's up with a single click.

There are competitors that I've written about in this field in May 2007 with the leading one being Profilactic. I wrote about them separately. But the model that Ventana has is unique and interesting. Its not just aggregating social networks that are out there - its pretty much aggregating content in the format that you want and that's immensely valuable especially when you can carry it mobilely and without a whole lot of baggage or digital overhead. My interest in this doesn't come because I love Chris Carfi in a manly sort of way. It comes because I think that this is a genuinely interesting and potentially really valuable aggregator for consumers but even more so for businesses. Imagine integrating this with wikis and podcasts and blogs so that you can find out what you need - and intelligently deal with a company that you work for or want to deal with (as an employee or a customer respectively) while staring at your iPhone or your Blackberry in real time or nearly so.

Very cool AND very important. I'll be following this more. I've seen it and it works.

I'm Paul Greenberg and I approve this blog entry.




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