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Greenleaf Book Group
Service Provider
The Second-Best Business Book Ever Written
Honesty in thought leadership matters. And so does seeing the light. Honesty, in its purest form, is a key characteristic of all thought leaders, so I’m going to hit you with the truth. Many business books today are written for the purpose of winning more business for an author, or acquiring new speaking gigs, and anyone who fits into that camp is A-OK with me. It’s a smart move. But after more than four decades in sales and marketing, I’m beyond those goals. Frankly, it feels great that I’m not anchored to those intentions anymore. I have only one intent in The Second-Best Business Book Ever Written, and that’s to teach the ins and outs of thought leadership to as many people as possible because that’s how corporations, and the individuals who run them, succeed. There’s a process to becoming a thought leader; it’s methodical, detailed, and rewarding. After all, where’s the amusement in being a price-chopper? Or even a technology leader where the tenure is as short as my nephew’s attention span? The greatest thought leaders started sharing their thinking 2,500 years ago through the teachings of my four favorites: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Aspasia. I’m going to travel with you down the thought leadership road, known as the Via Egnatia, from the foothills that rise above Athens to the skyscrapers that tower above Madison Avenue. And along the way, I’m going to show you how I did it for Fortune 500 companies, and for small and midsize businesses, with a few wild detours along the way. By all accounts, the Green Bay Packers future Hall of Fame quarterback Aaron Rodgers was born with a rock-solid throwing arm and an annoying chip on his shoulder. I’m no Rodgers fan; after all, I was born and raised in inner-city Chicago and have been a Bears fan since birth, but I recognize greatness, and Aaron Rodgers is a great football player. Some of his other qualities? Not so much. But these aren’t lessons about tackle football. They’re insights about leadership; about what happens off the football field, and on a more important playing field; about greatness in sales, marketing, and business; and about thought leadership, the single most important differentiator in the business playbook. Or, as Plato not so recently said, obviously unaware of Aaron Rodgers’s famous retreat into darkness, “We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light.” I’d like to shed some light on what’s required in business, but frequently misunderstood. What every salesperson needs to know, but doesn’t always know how to achieve it. And what every marketing expert wishes they had in their bag of tricks. To simply say that thought leadership is an essential part of the disciplines of market leaders is like saying a stick is an essential part of a Popsicle. Well, it is, assuming you’re not interested in taste, color, packaging, name, price, quality, and the beat goes on.
Reviews
Marks challenges readers to become “thought leader[s]” in this constructive debut, starting with hefty praise for his four favorite ancient Greek scholars—Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Aspasia—as prime examples of “listening, asking questions, pushing ethical behavior, and pursuing an existence steeped in honesty and trust.” Marks draws on the tenets of those philosophers, as well as from his own experience in advertising and marketing, to lay a solid foundation of business acumen, describing content marketing as a “blatant money grab thinly veiled as an educational resource” and decrying anyone seeking to shamelessly exploit their customers. Instead, he encourages thought leadership as the way to dominate one’s industry, teaching it as a dynamic strategy that requires a huge investment in training and execution.

The guide is candid and to the point, and Marks notes the potential pitfalls of several business strategies, including aggressive discounting, top-notch customer service, and pioneering in technology and innovation. He uses case studies to reinforce his guidance, spotlighting businesses from ArbiterSports to Nordstrom, and shares the ins and outs of their successes and failures, using Voice-of-Customer (VOC) research as the benchmark for their wins and losses; Mister Car Wash emerges with gold stars, “singlehandedly chang[ing] the industry’s stigma from bad boy to goodness gracious,” while others fare less well.

After walking readers through this approach, Marks delivers step-by-step guidance on launching “thought leadership initiative[s]” for any business, always returning to the philosophies of Greek notables to promote the “right mindset.” His “Critical Insight Selling” technique—that “teaches sales reps how to sell wisdom before they sell anything else”—takes center stage, and the importance of corporate ethics makes a repeat appearance throughout as well. The text is sidetracked at times by unnecessary asides, but overall Marks delivers a well-written, common-sense approach, updating the fundamentals for today’s marketing professionals under the thought leadership umbrella.

Takeaway: Candid guide that breaks down thought leadership in business.

Comparable Titles: Adam Witty and Rusty Shelton’s Authority Marketing, Jan Phillips’s The Art of Original Thinking.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

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