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August 4, 2003

The Fall of Advertising and the Rise of PR



AIPMM Rating

Buy From Powells
Buy from Powells
Despite being light on facts, this is a good book to peruse. There are amusing anecdotes and some brash exaggerations ("Every brand that got to the top got there through PR"). I recommend checking this book out from your local library or buying it used.

Book Description

The first all-in-one guide to the techniques and tools of today's top product managers

Marketing strategists Ries and Ries spend all 320 pages of their latest book arguing one point: skillful public relations is what sells, not advertising. Case in point: the failure of Pets.com's sock puppet ads. However, in a chapter devoted to dot-com advertising excesses, the authors never mention that many dot-coms had miserable business plans and neophyte management. (The Rieses may be counting on the sock puppet to sell another commodity, as a deflated sock puppet dominates the book's jacket.) Today, most small companies aren't bloated with venture capital to buy TV ads, yet the book has little practical advice on how these companies' executives should use public relations, particularly PR's most important role: crisis control. Some readers might resent paying $24.95 for what amounts to an advertisement for pricey PR consulting firms like Ries & Ries. The authors frequently poke fun at the most outrageous TV ads of recent years, paralleling Sergio Zyman's The End of Advertising As We Know It (reviewed above), a more thoughtful critique of current advertising trends. The inherent flaw in the Rieses' logic: time and again they cite ad campaigns for new products that are "off message" and then say how much sales declined; this supports the notion that products and services are sold by good advertising. Although their book is occasionally entertaining, the argument is simplistic and self-serving. Illus.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Posted by Therese at 2:37 PM

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