I won this book at a workshop on Wednesday, started reading it. Main concepts were expressed in workshop. I'll summarize at some point, but the main premise is that authenticity has joined, goods, services, quality, cost etc. as a factor people look for when they purchase. "Fake" is the new "junk." There's a fake-real matrix, inspired by Hamlet: Is the company true to itself? Is it who it says it is to others? Know who you are, and be that. Don't plaster real over everything to say you're real -- that's not how to render authenticity. Selling out an issue here, too. When keeping it real goes wrong.