We buy them full of optimism, promise ourselves this one will change everything, read three chapters, highlight half the pages… and then quietly return to doing exactly what we were doing before.
Our Marketing & Design Book Review section exists to help separate genuinely useful thinking from recycled buzzwords, overhyped frameworks, and advice that could have been a two-page blog post instead of a 300-page hardback.
We’ll read the books so you don’t have to, or at least help you decide which ones are actually worth your time. Expect honest reviews, practical takeaways, and the occasional raised eyebrow when a “revolutionary” idea turns out to be something marketers have been doing since 1987.
Some books will inspire. Some will confuse. Some will make us wonder how the author stretched one idea across twelve chapters. Either way, we’ll overthink them so you can spend more time doing marketing, and less time reading about it.
Book Review: Guerilla Marketing – Easy and Inexpensive Strategies for Making Big Profits from Your Small Business. by Jay Conrad Levinson. If you run a website called The Overthinker’s Guide to Modern Marketing, there is a certain irony in recommending a book that basically says: “Stop overthinking. Go do something bold.” And yet, here we…
Book Review: D&AD – The Copy Book If words are the atoms of great marketing, then D&AD – The Copy Book, published by Taschen, is the periodic table every creative thinker ought to have on their desk. Loaded with insights from some of the world’s sharpest copywriters, this book isn’t just a manual; it’s a…
Book Review : Pitch: How to Captivate and Convince Any Audience on the Planet by Danny Fontaine. Modern marketing loves complexity. Funnels get deeper, decks get longer, and somehow the message gets smaller. Danny Fontaine’s Pitch arrives as a welcome antidote, reminding us that persuasion is not about slides, jargon, or frameworks, but about human…
Book Review : No Bullsh*t Strategy: A Founder’s Guide to Competitive Advantage by Alex M H Smith In an era where “strategy” too often translates to corporate jargon, buzzphrases, and fluffy frameworks, No Bullsh*t Strategy is exactly what its title promises: clear, direct, and genuinely useful guidance on how to think about strategy in a…
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