The Vikings went from making wine snifters from the skulls of their enemies to selling furniture in flat boxes. They took civilization based on pillaging and plundering and gave us The Nobel Prize and IKEA. The Vikings are back, and this time they mean business. The Viking Manifesto is a call to arms for a new way of doing business. It's about having an original idea and a different way of making it happen. The ancient Vikings got rich with swords and fast ships; the modern ones with safe cars (Volvo) and sippable vodka (Absolut). Both broke the rules. Both came from nowhere to take the world by storm. This book reveals how Scandinavian companies are making a huge impact on the business landscape, and what lessons other companies can learn from them. It is a book that will astonish, inspire and amuse.
Great read! A must for the modern manager, business owner, and marketeer. Quick, short chapters that leave you with lots of talking points for you need strategy meeting. Was able to read this in one night due to both the speed of the book and my inability to put it down. Hightly recommended.
Very annoying Marketing Guide, although aren't ALL marketing guides the very same? We seem to be doing just fine and dandy without reverting back to those smack-inducing levels of corporate jargon and moustache stroking Machiavellian ploys.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Libro de sencillísima lectura, fiel al estilo de los otros muchos libros del mismo género. Como ellos, no suele descubrir nada nuevo, si bien tiene la virtud de destacar/recordar ciertos planteamientos que se acostumbran a olvidar con facilidad.
Por cierto (modo ironía on): el "capítulo 44", un tanto estereotipado.
Light and breezy read about some good marketing principles. Won't blow your mind if you've read some Seth Godin, some Simon Sinek, some Ribbonfarm.
In a nutshell: Be irreverent, recognize quality, act with boldness, think different, etc etc. Triggered some pleasant thoughts.
A decent reminder, I suppose a nice book to have on your shelf to flip through from time to time. Not earthshakingly good, but didn't make me cringe. Entertaining, fun.
A fun, easy, blasphemous read. Not heavy on profound wisdom, but this book was a much-needed jolt to get me out of considerably less bold ways of thinking