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Book Description

Caveat venditor—let the seller beware

While marketers look for more ways to get personal with customers, including new tricks with “big data,” customers are about to get personal in their own ways, with their own tools. Soon consumers will be able to:

• Control the flow and use of personal data
• Build their own loyalty programs
• Dictate their own terms of service
• Tell whole markets what they want, how they want it, where and when they should be able to get it, and how much it should cost

And they will do all of this outside of any one vendor’s silo.

This new landscape we’re entering is what Doc Searls calls The Intention Economy—one in which demand will drive supply far more directly, efficiently, and compellingly than ever before. In this book he describes an economy driven by consumer intent, where vendors must respond to the actual intentions of customers instead of vying for the attention of many.

New customer tools will provide the engine, with VRM (Vendor Relationship Management) providing the consumer counterpart to vendors’ CRM (Customer Relationship Management) systems. For example, imagine being able to change your address once for every company you deal with, or combining services from multiple companies in real time, in your own ways—all while keeping an auditable accounting of every one of your interactions in the marketplace. These tantalizing possibilities and many others are introduced in this book.

As customers become more independent and powerful, and the Intention Economy emerges, only vendors and organizations that are ready for the change will survive, and thrive. Where do you stand?

Table of Contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Prologue: Paying Attention to Intention
  6. Introduction Free Markets Require Free Customers
  7. 1 The Promised Market
  8. Part I Customer Captivity
    1. 2 The Advertising Bubble
    2. 3 Your Choice of Captor
    3. 4 Lopsided Law
    4. 5 Asymmetrical Relations
    5. 6 Dysloyalty
    6. 7 Big Data
    7. 8 Complications
  9. Part II The Networked Marketplace
    1. 9 Net Pains
    2. 10 The Live Web
    3. 11 Agency
    4. 12 Free and Open
    5. 13 Bits Mean Business
    6. 14 Vertical and Horizontal
    7. 15 The Comity of the Commons
  10. Part III The Liberated Customer
    1. 16 Personal Freedom
    2. 17 VRM
    3. 18 Development
    4. 19 The Four-Party System
    5. 20 The Law in Our Own Hands
    6. 21 Small Data
    7. 22 APIs
    8. 23 EmanciPaytion
    9. 24 VRM + CRM
  11. Part IV The Liberated Vendor
    1. 25 The Dance
    2. 26 Commons Cause
    3. 27 What to Do
  12. Epilogue Almost There
  13. Notes
  14. Bibliography
  15. Acknowledgments
  16. About the Authors
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