The Dot.Bomb Survival Guide
Sean Carton(Author)
McGraw-Hill Inc.,US (Publisher)
Published on 12. November 2001
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-0-07-137779-9 (ISBN)
Description
Dot.Bomb: Surviving (and Thriving) In the Dotcom Implosion reveals the mistakes that failed dotcoms made, as well as the attributes of the successful ones. By dissecting what worked and what went wrong, today's ebusinesses can successfully navigate the thin line between big bucks and bust. Over the past few years, the New Economy has launched some spectacular fortunes...and some equally spectacular catastrophes. April of 2000 marked the beginning of a shake out of dotcoms and ebusiness enterprises, and put the risk back in to IPOs. We're watching more dotcoms go bust every day, and many more charge toward their financial cliffs. Why have some companies soared to multi-billion dollar valuations while others have bitten the dust? Just as a postmortem can reveal details that led to medical insights that save lives, taking a look at the lifeless corpses of dead online companies can teach valuable lessons for today's ebusinesses that want to say alive and thrive in the New Economy. Dot.Bomb takes a look at a number of prominent dotcom successes and failures to discover what worked, what went wrong and what business lessons can be learned from the mistakes - By comparatively illustrating the right way to do it.
Each chapter will concentrate on a specific element that led to failure: flawed business plans, not knowing the customer, constructing the wrong business team, neglecting to ever complete a working product, high risk/short term thinking, over-hyping the product, bad funding deals, and misguided mergers and acquisitions. It will then feature a company that excelled in that area to reach success. In some cases, the most cursory marketing analysis would have shown that the issue for many dotcoms was not awareness, but preference and purchase building, which requires a different approach than appearing on the Super Bowl. Digging through the smoking wreckage, we'll look at how the crash could have been avoided and how the mistakes of the dead can lead to successful strategies for the living. Using sober analysis, Dot.Bomb will skim the dotcom death pool and the winner's circles for strategies to help the reader's ebusiness survive.
Included will be interviews with doomed workers who saw the bust coming, a review of some of the nuttier cultures and hiring practices, a burn-rate-o-meter, ideas that (thankfully) never made it, post-mortems from VC's and analysts as well as handy "autopsy chart" summaries. This book marks the end of the dotcom hype. Author and industry guru, Sean Carton, sits courtside and examines the right and wrong moves in the dotcom game. Managers and executives will be wary to miss this opportunity to glean tips and advice on how to ensure their dotcom survival and which uses real-life examples to illustrate it. More than anecdotes and trend research, Dot.Bomb provides substantial evidence to guide dotcom pioneers onward and upward.
Each chapter will concentrate on a specific element that led to failure: flawed business plans, not knowing the customer, constructing the wrong business team, neglecting to ever complete a working product, high risk/short term thinking, over-hyping the product, bad funding deals, and misguided mergers and acquisitions. It will then feature a company that excelled in that area to reach success. In some cases, the most cursory marketing analysis would have shown that the issue for many dotcoms was not awareness, but preference and purchase building, which requires a different approach than appearing on the Super Bowl. Digging through the smoking wreckage, we'll look at how the crash could have been avoided and how the mistakes of the dead can lead to successful strategies for the living. Using sober analysis, Dot.Bomb will skim the dotcom death pool and the winner's circles for strategies to help the reader's ebusiness survive.
Included will be interviews with doomed workers who saw the bust coming, a review of some of the nuttier cultures and hiring practices, a burn-rate-o-meter, ideas that (thankfully) never made it, post-mortems from VC's and analysts as well as handy "autopsy chart" summaries. This book marks the end of the dotcom hype. Author and industry guru, Sean Carton, sits courtside and examines the right and wrong moves in the dotcom game. Managers and executives will be wary to miss this opportunity to glean tips and advice on how to ensure their dotcom survival and which uses real-life examples to illustrate it. More than anecdotes and trend research, Dot.Bomb provides substantial evidence to guide dotcom pioneers onward and upward.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
25 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 157 mm
Weight
600 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-137779-9 (9780071377799)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
From $8 million to $0 in 3 weeks, my own story; burn for glory - a brief history of the dot com phenom; lies, damn lies, and business models; the customer? who's the customer?; fashion victims; oh yeah, the product!; short term thinking, short term company; hype bites back - marketing disasters; VC PDQ DOA aka "You Down with OPM*?"; biting off more than they could chew. Appendices: the dot-com graveyard; the winner's circle; mergermania chart.