- By Merrill R. (Rick) Chapman
- ISBN13: 978-1-59059-104-8
- ISBN10: 1-59059-104-6
- 288 pp.
- Published Jul 2003
- Print Book Price: $24.99
- eBook Price: $17.49
In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters
This book is an eye-opener to the differences between how software gets built and how it gets sold.
— Michael Ernest, JavaRanch Sheriff
— Valentin Crettaz, Val's Blog: Stuff for software engineers and Java addicts
— Jeff "Hemos" Bates, Director, OSDN Online & Executive Editor, Slashdot.org
— Jonathan Angel, Senior Editor, West Coast, Adweek's Technology Marketing Magazine
— Brenda Bennett South, Vice President, Weber Shandwick
— Alyssa Dver, BusinessWeek Special Sections Contributor
— James Fallows, former editor-in-chief, US News and World Report, and regular writer for The Atlantic
In Search of Stupidity is National Lampoon meets Peter Drucker. It's a funny and well-written business book that takes a look at some of the most influential marketing and business philosophies of the last 20 years and, through the dark glass of hindsight, provides an educational and vastly entertaining examination of why they didn't work for many of the country's largest and best-known high-tech companies. Make no mistake: most of them did not work.
Marketing wizard Richard Chapman takes readers on a hilarious ride in this book, which is richly illustrated with cartoons and reproductions of many of the actual campaigns used at the time. Filled with personal anecdotes spanning Chapman's remarkable career (he was present at many now-famous meetings and events), In Search of Stupidity is a no-holds-barred look at the best of the worst hopeless marketing ideas and business decisions in the last 20 years of the technology industry.
Author Information
Merrill R. (Rick) Chapman
Merrill R. (Rick) Chapman is the author of the first edition of this book. He has worked in the software industry since 1978 as a programmer, salesman, support representative, senior marketing manager, and consultant for many different companies, including WordStar (really MicroPro, but no one remembers the name of the company), Ashton-Tate, IBM, Inso, Novell, Bentley Systems, Berlitz, Hewlett-Packard, and Ziff-Davis. His first computer was a Trash One (you antiques out there know what that is), and he began his career writing software inventory management systems for beer and soda distributors in New York City. He is the author of The Product Marketing Handbook for Software, coauthor of the Software Industry and Information Association's US Software Channel Marketing and Distribution Guide, and periodically writes articles about software and high-tech marketing for a variety of publications.
