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J**D
Motivational, Inspirational, Egotistical! All the reviews are right!
I read the book, and I just read all the reviews as of April 2, 2011. I agree with all of them, except perhaps the one on whether George Lois is, or is not, racist. I can't say.What I can say is that this book is MOTIVATIONAL. It motivates you to get excited about advertising, about your job, about life. Lois is a New York talker - he puffs himself up to be bigger than perhaps he really is, puffs up the contrasts between himself and others to be more dramatic than they really are... No doubt. But he motivates you to believe in yourself, to toot your own horn because if you don't toot it, no one else will.This book is INSPIRATIONAL. George Lois is one of the most successful people in advertising, and he gives lots of BELIEVE in yourself, do your best, don't compromise sorts of advice. Yeah, probably a lot of it is BS, and again probably puffed up by George to be bigger than it probably ever really was. But he's an ad man, what do you expect? He puffs up an ad cover on Andy Warhol to make it seem bigger than Warhol's art itself. Yet it inspires you. Or at least it inspired me, to try to be better at what I do (I teach SEO / online Internet marketing - just Google 'Jason McDonald' to find me), and to be inspired to try harder, go farther, do more with less. Yada Yada Yada as George might say.And yes this book is EGOTISTICAL. George is very full of himself, as other reviewers have indicated. Lots of photos of himself, he even thinks he's better looking than Don Draper for example. But, again, what would you expect from an ad man.Finally, this book is fun to read. It has lots of pictures, lots of fun, crazy quotes. I read it on BART on my way to and from San Francisco, and I laughed out loud many times. It's a fun book, it's a great book. It's not a "how to" book. It's not a book meant to teach, but to inspire.It inspired me. I hope it will inspire you.
D**N
A damn good book I'll read over and over again
George Lois's book is about good advice, and there is no shortage of it. It's not just about being creative; he shared many life lessons that were very enlightening. George Lois might come across as arrogant, but he is right on so many things.For example, Tommy Hilfiger was gun-shy about George Loi's billboard ad, putting him alongside the other three great designers of the time. Did it work? It sure did and far exceeded anyone's expectations. Calvin Klein was furious. He told George Lois that it took him 20 years to get where Hifiger is today. George's answer was, why would it take twenty years when you can do it in 20 days? Did he earn his bragging right?To be successful, just being creative is not enough. George was trying to land the Chicago-based Quaker Oats Company as a customer. He was told that they liked his company, but New York was far away because of their need to call meetings at a moment's notice. After hanging up the phone, he and his two partners just raced to the airport to catch the next flight to Chicago. They got to the customer's office before they came back from lunch. The customer was thrilled to see them and gave them the business on the spot. His conclusion was, "Woody Allen was right: 80% of life was showing up!"You do not have to agree with him on everything. For example, George was dead against spending time on Twitter (now X.) Ironically, I learned about George Lois on Twitter. The book is easy to read, concise, and gets to the point. This is an awesome book that I'll never get tired of reading over and over again. I learned so much from it.
D**I
Nice to have for affirmations and inspirations and reminders of why we toil....
In the days of twitter, where 140 characters pass for guru status-and bloggers like Seth Godin have millions of followers, without really having done anything truly big-you come to this "book" and think- for a man with so many profoundly big ideas- he was slacking just a bit with this book....but, then again- if you want insight into someone who did revolutionize the ad industry- this is a lightweight guide.It's the kind of book you want to have around- to inspire you, push you, prod you into doing the best work possible.Sure, Lois has chutzpah in spades- but- if you'd done what he's done- it comes naturally.I was halfway through it- and bought a copy for everyone in my shop. Within a day- someone had torn a page out and posted it on the wall (what page.... well, that's our little secret).For the money- there is some good advice- and a few pieces of truly great advice.The most important takeaway- reaffirming my rule about not doing work for people you don't respect, or products you wouldn't use.If you want more depth, deeper thoughts- read "What’s the Big Idea?"but- if you want easy- this is it.
C**O
One of my all-time favorites
I am in a creative - adjacent field (writing) and LOVE this book to inspire new ideas. I’ve had it for a decade and picked it up a dozen times over the years. It always spurs me to do bigger, bolder, better writing and to think about how to position my projects. Very rare that I write reviews, but this an absolute winner that has changed and improved my creative process.
A**R
Excellent, very readable, useful and funny
Excellent, very readable, useful and funny
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