You want to keep up with your marketing reading. But there's so much out there that you don't where to start—or, if you do... whether there'd be an end in sight with all the possibilities. Well, here are four from '04: recommended titles published last year. And as good a place to start as any.

Free Prize Inside: The Next Big Marketing Idea by Seth Godin (Portfolio, 256 pages, $19.95, Hardcover, May 2004)

In 2003, Seth Godin published a wildly popular book called Purple Cow. You may have heard of it. (I'm kidding.) That book was all about creating remarkable products and services. It answered the question, "What is a remarkable product?"

Well, Seth was back in 2004, wanting to show us how to make a remarkable product with his Free Prize Inside.

The book focuses on who within an organization should be doing the work of being remarkable. The idea is not to throw more money at R&D or advertising, but to come up with what he calls "soft innovation."

And that is as simple as coming up with a remarkable idea, he says (think Tupperware parties and frequent flier miles)—The Free Prize: the thing that makes you or your product remarkable. A Free Prize is about satisfying wants versus needs. Don't give your customers more; give them something extra.

The book takes a fresh look at coming up with remarkable ideas but also implementing them. It is not only the marketing folks' job to introduce new products and services. Every person in an organization can come up with these ideas.

Getting people in your organization to go along with your idea is crucial, of course, and Seth has nifty tactics for getting others to co-champion an idea with you. No more brainstorming. Instead, try "edgecrafting." Products and services have lots of edges, and he spends 30 pages talking about how you can find yours.

And just to prove his point on the importance of The Free Prize, the first print run is packaged in a cereal box. The other "free prize" included is a spoof copy of the Wall Street Journal titled, "THIS IS NOT THE JOURNAL." It is loaded with quirky bits about the book.

The thing about Seth Godin is this: he doesn't beat around the bush. And he puts his money where his mouth is on how to do it: Free Prize Inside includes an actual free prize and is a remarkable Purple Cow.

The Marketing Playbook: The Battle-Tested System for Capturing and Keeping the Lead in Any Market by John Zagula and Richard Tong (Portfolio, $22.95, Hardcover, 288 Pages, October 2004)

There are two basic types of business books: descriptive and prescriptive. I gravitate toward the prescriptive. I like books that give 10 ways to solve a problem. Many business book readers are the same. They want a "how to" book to get them started. The Marketing Playbook by John Zagula and Richard Tong fits into this category perfectly.

While at Microsoft, the authors noticed patterns in the marketing plans the company was implementing. The main thing was that there weren't many variations.

In the book, they describe five "marketing plays" that will works for any situation. They have given them easy to remember names (Drag Race, Stealth, Best of Both, High-Low and Platform). They describe in detail how to run each play, how to identify which play to run, and what play to run if the current one starts to fail.

As venture capitalists with Ignition Partners, they now use this technique with every company that comes through their doors looking for funding.

Zagula and Tong say they wrote this book because they were told repeatedly by colleagues that there is a need for "a helpful, straightforward marketing guide rather than the hype, buzzwords, or academic theory they typically see." The add:

They told us that they would like to read a book that not only shows them how to gain and hold on to their rightful leadership position but also helps them repeat the process over and over, a book they could believe, a book whose methods and suggestions have been proven in the heat of battle, a book written by people who knew from experience how to attain and retain the lead in a market but who also knew how to make the process easy to follow and implement.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jack Covert is the president and founder of 800-CEO-Read (www.800ceoread.com). Reach him at jack@800ceoread.com.