Posts Tagged ‘marketing’

Tweet To Win: Boom Chicago tickets!

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

With sharp comedy and quick thinking, Boom Chicago’s show Branded For Life focuses on the choices we make and why. These decisions happen not just in the store, but everywhere in our lives. Why do we love some things and mock others? When you’re talking about products, or even people, it’s all about the brand, baby.

Branded For Life also shines a light on those who shape our opinions. Mad Men, marketers and spin doctors work behind the scenes to pull our strings and “engage” us.

But this is not just another improv show: come to dinner and drinks before the show and have yourself and your friends rebranded. Or take part in one of the spin-off events, including private, tailored branding sessions. You can find out more on the Boom Chicago website. The show premieres April 11. Want to see it for free? Read on!

See Branded For Life for free with ABC

The lovely folks at Boom Chicago have been incredibly generous and we have a BIG bunch of Branded For Life tickets to give away. You could win a pair!

What do you need to do to get a hilariously funny night out for two, for free? Follow these easy peasy instructions:

1. If you don’t follow us on twitter yet, you’ll need to pop over to our twitter page and click on the ‘follow’ button to see our tweets. (If you’ve not already signed up for Twitter, the first thing you’ll see on the page is a big yellow SIGN UP! button. It’ll take you about 30 seconds.) If you already follow our tweets then you can skip this step, of course.

2. Retweet THIS TWEET to your adoring followers before 11am on Monday May 21st. Don’t forget to make sure your tweet includes @wwwabcnl so we can see it!

3. Wait. :-) We’ll pick the winners at random from all the tweets. We’ll contact the winners via twitter, and ask for their details and also which store they would like to collect their prize from. (We can’t mail prizes out – sorry. You’ll should be able to collect your prize or send one of your minions to do it for you.)

Please read the complete Tweet To Win rules before entering!

ABC Meets: Sheridan Simove

Friday, November 4th, 2011

The relentless, scandalous, maverick inventor Sheridan (a.k.a. Shed) Simove is a performer, author and novelty gift entrepreneur. (Those marvelously whacky sound machines on sale in our stores are a Shed creation.)

Shed is an expert in IDEAS and can help you make your ideas happen. Shed believes that “when an idea pops into your head, it can send you on amazing adventures – if you follow the idea through…”. Shed’s passion is also to tackle things that have never been done before – and his own ideas can be for anything, ranging from ‘adult sweets’, TV shows, gifts, or his own currency. These true-life stories – plus his tips for how to make anything you desire come to life – feature in his books, performances and corporate speeches…

On Saturday December 3 , 2011 Sheridan Simove will be at ABC Amsterdam all day, just for you. He’ll be bringing all of his inventions with him for you to play with and wonder at, (or tut at – they’re that kind of invention). Some of these object have never seen before , including prototypes of his latest ideas.

It will be a grand day of show & tell, Q&A and amazing ideas. Sheridan will of course also be signing his books Ideas Man, and What Every Man Thinks about Apart from Sex.

In addition, Shed will be giving an inspiring and hugely entertaining talk at the Hotel V on Friday December 2 , 2011 at 8pm on ‘Creativity, Ideas and How To Make Anything You Desire Actually Happen’. You don’t want to miss his unique, informative and hilarious presentation! Reservations can be made via the Hotel V website. See their complete events agenda here.

ReWork: Opinions are like a box of chocolates

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Reviewed by Steven

Life is full of opinions, advice and people of the opinion that they are giving good advice. Many veterans from the world of Big Business feel the need to share their knowledge, to help others and – of course – to sell books and cash in on them with speaking engagements. The biggest obstacle they run into: the ambitious professionals they are trying to inform, are too busy working late and climbing ever upwards on the career ladder to make time for someone telling them how to do things differently.

The best way to tackle this problem: deliver the information bite-sized, be to the point and make it look like something someone could enjoyably inhale within one or two lunch breaks. It famously worked for Spencer Johnson’s bestseller Who Moved My Cheese?. Marketing guru Seth Godin also has a couple of very successful books in print, using the same principle: Free Prize Inside being his first and The Dip being a recent New York Times bestseller. Godin’s books are indeed fun to read, but then you would expect so from a writer whose whole career has been built around connecting with an audience.

New kids on the business book block are Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson, with their title ReWork. They are no strangers to writing, contributing to Signal vs. Noise, one of the web’s ‘most popular’ blogs, and they follow the nugget approach, with success. On top of their writing accomplishments, Fried and Hansson are the founders of 37signals, a ‘trailblazing’ software company with an unusual structure: there are a relatively small amount of employees, spread out over different countries, working across time zones. Every once in a long while, everybody meets up in person to touch base. The 37signals work ethic is interesting: overwork is frowned upon, Facebook and YouTube distractions are okay and the time spent in meetings is kept to a bare minimum.

Their book is a rapid-fire of ideas. Some examples: don’t always try to grow bigger on principle, as it might be bad for your company, don’t always do what the customer wants and don’t stress yourself out about skipping ‘good’ to get to ‘great’ straight away.

You might want to reread ReWork after the first time you finish it, as you are likely to zip past the various concepts só fast that a lot of them won’t stick with you. Beware that some of the ideas likely won’t be applicable to you: the book flap makes it seem like the book will be highly useful to everybody. However, it’s mostly geared to people who are (thinking of) running a business, and a few points are specific to the software industry. For instance, 37signals institutes long periods of ‘alone’ time, so people can work on projects efficiently, without distractions from colleagues. There are plenty of jobs however, where communicating with colleagues and customers makes up a large part of the actual work.

While the writing is nice and lean, the book – in its hardcover edition – has been injected with some steroids it seems: large margins and space-wasting but not terribly useful illustrations make the book unnecessarily bulky. It was clearly done to make the book look more appealing, but feels like overkill. Rest assured however, that it’s not overcompensation for something lacking in the content department. Fried and Hansson themselves appreciate a good writer: ‘Writing is today’s currency for good ideas’. They advise to always hire the better writer, in case of doubt, the thought being that someone who can express his ideas clearly is a precious commodity, as it also indicates a clear mind. They would definitely hire themselves on the basis of this book.

The paperback is coming out this month.

Bookbits for September 1st, 2009

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

But first, an illicit happy birthday to my sister.  Good things happen on September 1st, too.  :-)

  • Quiz! Exams in Literature – sounds terrifying.  I got 6 out of 10 (I passed, yay!).  Holidays Reading was posted, erm, during my summer holiday.  I got 5 out of 11, mainly thanks again to my stupendous guessing skills.  And this one’s all about idioms (I’ll let you know the score when I have found the courage to take it).

Karin reviews Flood by Stephen Baxter

Monday, June 30th, 2008

One of the best perks of the job of bookseller is that publishers send us free review copies of upcoming books in the hope that we will stock them in our stores. They can be very creative when they want us to notice a particular title among all the other freebies on offer.

flood.jpgWhen Flood by Stephen Baxter came in with another set of review copies it immediately caught my eye as it was wrapped up in a sealed, clear plastic bag with URGENT and Evidence Bag written on it. The book itself was stained with make-believe watermarks on the edges and on the cover was the the following text:

DATE: Planet Fall Plus 15 days (2115 AD)
Mission: Deep Water Retrieval Voyage 3, evidence lot 12445(b)
Recovered by: Deep Sea Submersible Evolution 1
Source: Central London collapsed tower block
Depth: 4000 meters
Subject: Account (unofficial ?) of global inundation between 2016 and 2050(?) (more…)