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Reputation economics: why who you know is worth more than what you have Zhavoronkov, Alex [book]

By: Series: Mastering business research methodsPublication details: New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. Edition: First editionDescription: 246 PISBN:
  • 9781137278623
Other title:
  • Reputation economics
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HD30.4 .E433 2015
Subject: As the internet has increasingly become more social, the value of individual reputations has risen, and a new currency based on reputation has been created. This means that not only are companies tracking what an individual is tweeting and what sites they spend the most time on, but they're using this knowledge to predict the consumer's future behavior. And a world in which Target knows that a woman is pregnant before she does, or where a person gets a job (or loses one) based on his high school hijinx is a scary one indeed. Joshua Klein's Reputation Economics asks these crucial questions: But what if there were a way to harness the power of these new technologies to empower the individual and entrepreneur? What if it turned out that David was actually better suited to navigate this new realm of reputation than Goliath? And what if he ushered in a new age of business in which reputation, rather than money, was the strongest currency of all? This is all currently happening online already
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Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
หนังสือ หนังสือ PIM Creative Learning Space Chaengwattana หนังสือภาษาไทย Thai Book Shelves HD30.4 .E433 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 32550000235485
Total holds: 0

As the internet has increasingly become more social, the value of individual reputations has risen, and a new currency based on reputation has been created. This means that not only are companies tracking what an individual is tweeting and what sites they spend the most time on, but they're using this knowledge to predict the consumer's future behavior. And a world in which Target knows that a woman is pregnant before she does, or where a person gets a job (or loses one) based on his high school hijinx is a scary one indeed. Joshua Klein's Reputation Economics asks these crucial questions: But what if there were a way to harness the power of these new technologies to empower the individual and entrepreneur? What if it turned out that David was actually better suited to navigate this new realm of reputation than Goliath? And what if he ushered in a new age of business in which reputation, rather than money, was the strongest currency of all? This is all currently happening online already

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