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 : Using Behavioral Science in Marketing by Nancy Harhut. There’s a comforting illusion in marketing that customers are calmly weighing up product features, comparing prices rationally, and making thoughtful purchasing decisions based entirely on logic. Nancy Harhut’s Using Behavioral Science in Marketing makes it clear that this idea is mostly a myth. Honestly,…
Book Review : The Choice Factory by Richard Shotton. Many people in marketing like to think customers carefully compare products, look at features, consider value, and then make logical choices. The Choice Factory by Richard Shotton spends about 200 pages showing why this belief is a bit too hopeful. Luckily, the book explains this in…
Book Review : Storytelling Exhibitions by Philip Hughes. Many people assume exhibitions are just quiet rooms filled with objects, while visitors stroll through and try to make sense of them. Philip Hughes’s book, Storytelling Exhibitions, shows that today’s exhibitions aim for much more than that. Exhibitions now try to create real feelings for visitors, and…
Book Review : Human First Marketing by Phil Treagus-Evans. There’s a strange trend in modern marketing where brands spend enormous amounts of time trying to sound human while simultaneously removing every actual human element from the process. More automation. More AI-generated content. More so-called personalised experiences, but no real person behind the words. Phil Treagus-Evans’s…
Book Review : Brains On Fire by Robbin Phillips, Greg Cordell, Geno Church & Spike Jones. There’s a particular kind of optimism in modern marketing that suggests if we automate enough emails, optimise enough funnels, and post enough short-form video content, customers will eventually fall lovingly into our sales pipeline. Brains on Fire offers a…
Book Review : Alchemy by Rory Sutherland. There’s a comforting belief in marketing that people are rational. That given the right information, presented clearly enough, they will make sensible decisions. Alchemy by Rory Sutherland exists to gently, brilliantly, and repeatedly destroy that belief. The Big Idea (Spoiler: Logic Is Overrated) Sutherland’s central argument is both…
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