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| Guerilla Marketing on the Internet: The Definitive Guide from the Father of Guerilla Marketing | 
| Authors: Jay Conrad Levinson, Mitch Meyerson, Mary Eule Scarborough Publisher: Entrepreneur Press Category: Book
List Price: $21.95 Buy New: $12.15 You Save: $9.80 (45%)
Buy New/Used from $12.15
Avg. Customer Rating:   (2 reviews) Sales Rank: 17142
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 7.4 x 0.8
ISBN: 1599181940 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.872 EAN: 9781599181943 ASIN: 1599181940
Publication Date: July 2, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Add the Internet to Your Marketing Arsenal-Guerrilla Style! The Father of Guerrilla Marketing, Jay Conrad Levinson, changed marketing forever when he unleashed his original arsenal of marketing tactics for surviving the advertising jungle on a shoestring budget. And now, Levinson and online marketing masters Mitch Meyerson and Mary Eule Scarborough once again show you how to beat the odds by combining the unconventional, take-no-prisoners Guerrilla Marketing approach with today's ultimate marketing weapon-the Internet. Learn how to use the internet Guerrilla style. Level the playing field, and achieve greater online visibility. Boost traffic to your website. Convert visitors into paying clients. Capture and keep your market share, and create multiple income streams-all while saving time and money! This complete Guerrilla Marketing online guide includes: - The 10 most effective Guerrilla strategies
- Case studies of the five greatest online Guerrilla Marketing campaigns
- How to create a high-impact website on a budget
- Low-cost tactics for maximizing traffic
- The 12 biggest internet marketing mistakes and how to avoid them
- Creative tactics and cutting-edge tools that inspire customers to take action
- Essential information on cutting-edge technology
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| Customer Reviews:
  Guerrilla's of the World Unite August 22, 2008 All the Guerrilla books seem like smart buys to me. Levinson is a very clear speaker and his writing speaks directly to the heart of the matter. Every page offers practical, inspiring advice that makes you want to get moving in your life. This is very good for anyone who wants to market something. I am using it to help build an experimental writing website for Coatlism Press and [...] and it has helped me immensely. I strongly recommend it to anybody with any product. If it can help sell books and writing, which are hard to sell, I could only imagine how much help it could give to a faster selling product (like protein powder).
  Good advice, poorly edited, still beneficial, still Guerrilla August 8, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This was not my first book in the Guerrilla Marketing series. I have a great deal of respect for Jay Conrad Levinson. His books and his writing style hook me, they're like reading great novels, fast-paced novels at that, his books are tough to put down. I always feel like he's had about 6 cups of coffee and can't even contain his excitement when he's telling you what you need to know.
I think it is problematic when Levinson writes these books with other authors. I read GM in 30 Days which Levinson co-wrote, and that book was also a little sloppy. When Levinson is the co-writer, I don't feel the energy all the way through the book, but I do in some parts and I feel I can tell who was writing in certain sections.
So, to GM on the Internet specifically. There probably isn't much new here if you read the 4th edition of Guerilla Marketing, where Levinson starts talking about blogs, podcasts and websites, however, the ideas are discussed in more depth, a good thing for Guerrillas. The rest of the book is rather obvious if you're a Guerilla. I have not read any other Internet Marketing books, nor will I, so I'm not sure if this one is par for the course.
There were many mis-spelling and improper word uses in this book. A specific example, on page 133 there is a paragraph that starts "If you'd if you'd", so again, it's just poor oversight, probably the publisher/editor's fault, not necessarily the authors. On page 85 the word "covert" should have been "convert".
If I were to point out the most helpful part of the book, it would be the web links provided, these were decent and I have started trying to get myself familiar with the ones I had not heard of. In the section on podcasting, the authors were very specific with the directions for creating a podcast. I wasn't in front of a computer when I read that section, but I felt I could see every step. However, for all the detail there, there was not as much detail given to some areas where I personally felt I could have been enlightened, for example the sections about Search Engine Optimization, Affiliate Programs and Merchant Accounts were too short and what was there was too diffucult to comprehend.
Overall, I love the Guerrilla Marketing series. I do suggest this book because even if you're an accomplished Guerrilla, this book is a relatively quick read and could be seen as an up to date (published in 2008) refresher course. If you're not a Guerrilla, read this book, and then go back and read the main Guerrilla Marketing book and you'll be all the better for it.
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