Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling Technology Products to Mainstream Customers
Stock image - cover art may vary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0887305199
ISBN-13: 9780887305191
Publisher: Harpercollins
Release Date: November, 1991
Length: 224 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 9.3 X 6.1 X 1 inches
Language: English
   
   

Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling Technology Products to Mainstream Customers

Rate it!  
(Avg. 5)
Customer Reviews

Add to Wish List

From
$3.97 Free Shipping
in the USA

List Price: $28.99 Amazon.com:
N/A

The old method for marketing smart products - which basically amounted to throwing money away with both hands - makes way for a totally new game plan.
Buy Now Filter by Shipping Prices
Seller Ships From   Condition Copies Price Shipping Qty. Order
Thrift Books WA Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Motor City Books MI Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Atlanta Book Company GA Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Yankee Clipper Books CT Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Blue Cloud Books AZ Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Silver Arch Books MO Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Sierra Nevada Books NV Very Good 1 $4.07 FREE Add to Cart
Green Earth Books OR Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Atlanta Book Company GA   Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Blue Cloud Books AZ Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Free State Books MD Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Sierra Nevada Books NV Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Green Earth Books OR Acceptable 1 $3.97 FREE Add to Cart
No Dustjacket

1 5

Customer Reviews

  How to get the public to love your high-tech product

This serious, detailed book offers a nonconventional marketing approach for high-tech promoters and investors. Consultant Geoffrey Moore has thought long and hard about how to market new technology, so the book sometimes reads like an intriguing personal essay. He makes an elaborate case about different technology users, citing product examples to explain why each consumer matters at certain stages in product marketing. At times, his presentation get a little strained, such as when he tries to describe how consumer groups "reference" each other or how marketers must engage in "informed intuition." Moore devised his own explanations for the successes and failures of different high-tech marketing tactics, so your level of agreement depends on how much of his detailed theory fits your marketing concerns. We find substantial interest and value in this exploration of high-tech marketing.