BKWB20SG.RVW 20081005 "Web 2.0: A Strategy Guide", Amy Shuen, 2008, 978-0-596-52996-3, U$24.99/C$24.99 %A Amy Shuen %C 103 Morris Street, Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472 %D 2008 %G 978-0-596-52996-3 %I O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. %O U$24.99/C$24.99 800-998-9938 707-829-0515 nuts@ora.com %O http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596529961/robsladesinterne http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596529961/robsladesinte-21 %O http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596529961/robsladesin03-20 %O Audience i- Tech 1 Writing 1 (see revfaq.htm for explanation) %P 243 p. %T "Web 2.0: A Strategy Guide" In the foreword, Tim O'Reilly notes that Web 2.0 is about users collectively building applications by using them. In the preface, the author, Amy Shuen, says that Web 2.0 is a great many things, and that this book will tell you about making money from it, whatever it is. This is not a promising beginning. Chapter one is supposed to point out that users create value. There are some initial examples of user activity from flickr, but the first two proposed illustrations of how to use this activity in business (to analyze business models and assess stock market value) are completely unsupported by the material that has been presented. The text then goes on to give more specific details of business building, but what is being presented to the reader are merely fundamental business tools (such as cash flow analysis) to which Web 2.0 makes no apparent contribution. "Networks Multiply Effects," we are told in chapter two, but what kind of networks are we talking about? Any online connection? The Internet itself? There is no examination of the concept of networks, and all we see are some stories about service industries. People like social activities, and like social networking tools, we find out in chapter three. Chapter four presents random instances of the operations of online businesses. Finally, in chapter five, we get some archetypes of how to use social networking tools in a traditional business: this, along with the brief section on mashups in chapter four, is probably the most useful part of the book. (However, it may not be easy to figure out how to actually use the Web 2.0 tools in new, interesting, or profitable ways.) Chapter six purports to tie all the prior material into a "how to" plan, in five easy steps. Basically this is standard business analysis. There is one additional point, which boils down to "pay attention to people." This is a radically new idea, undiscovered except for "Theory X and Theory Y" from the sixties, "In Search of Excellence" from the eighties, and Jeffrey Pfeffer's "The Human Equation" (cf. BKHUMEQU.RVW) from about a decade ago. Not terribly helpful. And hardly a strategy. copyright Robert M. Slade, 2008 BKWB20SG.RVW 20081005