Professor Galloway is an entrepreneur. He explains how the four horsemen are humongous in two remarkable ways.
Their businesses appeal to one of three areas of our body—brain, heart, and genitals. We recognize iPhone as a luxury item to attract a future partner.
His T-algorithm is the way to find a company worth Trillion dollars. It contains eight factors: product differentiation, visionary capital, global reach, likability, vertical integration, AI, accelerant, and geography. To sum up, scalability matters.
The conclusion is that the Four should be broken up because they acquire all startups at extraordinary prices. The market needs to work better.
Galloway's insights are thought-provoking, and his writing style is engaging and accessible. Highly recommended.
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¥11,249¥11,249 税込
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販売者: CQC France
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The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google ペーパーバック – 2017/10/3
英語版
Scott Galloway
(著)
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購入オプションとあわせ買い
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
USA TODAY BESTSELLER
Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are the four most influential companies on the planet. Just about everyone thinks they know how they got there. Just about everyone is wrong.
For all that’s been written about the Four over the last two decades, no one has captured their power and staggering success as insightfully as Scott Galloway.
Instead of buying the myths these companies broadcast, Galloway asks fundamental questions. How did the Four infiltrate our lives so completely that they’re almost impossible to avoid (or boycott)? Why does the stock market forgive them for sins that would destroy other firms? And as they race to become the world’s first trillion-dollar company, can anyone challenge them?
In the same irreverent style that has made him one of the world’s most celebrated business professors, Galloway deconstructs the strategies of the Four that lurk beneath their shiny veneers. He shows how they manipulate the fundamental emotional needs that have driven us since our ancestors lived in caves, at a speed and scope others can’t match. And he reveals how you can apply the lessons of their ascent to your own business or career.
Whether you want to compete with them, do business with them, or simply live in the world they dominate, you need to understand the Four.
USA TODAY BESTSELLER
Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are the four most influential companies on the planet. Just about everyone thinks they know how they got there. Just about everyone is wrong.
For all that’s been written about the Four over the last two decades, no one has captured their power and staggering success as insightfully as Scott Galloway.
Instead of buying the myths these companies broadcast, Galloway asks fundamental questions. How did the Four infiltrate our lives so completely that they’re almost impossible to avoid (or boycott)? Why does the stock market forgive them for sins that would destroy other firms? And as they race to become the world’s first trillion-dollar company, can anyone challenge them?
In the same irreverent style that has made him one of the world’s most celebrated business professors, Galloway deconstructs the strategies of the Four that lurk beneath their shiny veneers. He shows how they manipulate the fundamental emotional needs that have driven us since our ancestors lived in caves, at a speed and scope others can’t match. And he reveals how you can apply the lessons of their ascent to your own business or career.
Whether you want to compete with them, do business with them, or simply live in the world they dominate, you need to understand the Four.
- 本の長さ320ページ
- 言語英語
- 出版社Portfolio
- 発売日2017/10/3
- 寸法15.24 x 2.29 x 22.86 cm
- ISBN-100525533303
- ISBN-13978-0525533306
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“An existential alarm bell wrapped in a business lesson wrapped in an entertaining and often hilarious (and, yes, occasionally blue-languaged) series of stories built with great writing. It keeps you entertained to make sure you’re informed.” – 800-CEO-READ
“Galloway takes the reader through a refreshingly clear-eyed look at the nature of dominance at Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and Google. He is interested in how these companies become more valuable with use instead of less, how they benefit from low cost of capital and the implications for things [that] could further strengthen their dominance.” —Brad Stone, Bloomberg Technology
“As the power of technology’s biggest companies comes under more scrutiny, NYU business professor Galloway reveals how Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google built massive empires.” —Publishers Weekly, “The Top 10 Business Books of Fall 2017”
"This is that rare book that not only informs but entertains. You'll never look at these four companies the same way again." - Jonah Berger, author of Contagious
“Scott Galloway is honest, outrageous, and provocative. This book will trigger your flight-or-fight nervous system like no other and in doing so challenge you to truly think differently.” —Calvin McDonald, CEO of Sephora
“The Four is an essential, wide-ranging powerhouse of a book that, like Scott Galloway himself, marries equal parts incisive, entertaining, and biting. As in his legendary MBA lectures, Galloway tells it like it is, sparing no business titan and no juggernaut corporation from well-deserved criticism. A must read.” —Adam Alter, author of Drunk Tank Pink
“If there is a blunter, more opinionated, faster-talking expert on the Internet than Scott Galloway, I haven’t come across him. Or her.” —Philip Elmer-DeWitt, Fortune
“Scott Galloway’s The Four is a bareback ride upon the four horses of the economic apocalypse – Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google. It is a timely exposition of the nature and concentration of power in the world today and, as a result, is much more than just a business book…The book contains more insights and provocative ideas than Amazon has Boeing 767s… My recommendation is to walk down to your local book store and buy this – or more likely, buy it on Amazon.”
Tom Upchurch, Wired
“Galloway takes the reader through a refreshingly clear-eyed look at the nature of dominance at Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and Google. He is interested in how these companies become more valuable with use instead of less, how they benefit from low cost of capital and the implications for things [that] could further strengthen their dominance.” —Brad Stone, Bloomberg Technology
“As the power of technology’s biggest companies comes under more scrutiny, NYU business professor Galloway reveals how Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google built massive empires.” —Publishers Weekly, “The Top 10 Business Books of Fall 2017”
"This is that rare book that not only informs but entertains. You'll never look at these four companies the same way again." - Jonah Berger, author of Contagious
“Scott Galloway is honest, outrageous, and provocative. This book will trigger your flight-or-fight nervous system like no other and in doing so challenge you to truly think differently.” —Calvin McDonald, CEO of Sephora
“The Four is an essential, wide-ranging powerhouse of a book that, like Scott Galloway himself, marries equal parts incisive, entertaining, and biting. As in his legendary MBA lectures, Galloway tells it like it is, sparing no business titan and no juggernaut corporation from well-deserved criticism. A must read.” —Adam Alter, author of Drunk Tank Pink
“If there is a blunter, more opinionated, faster-talking expert on the Internet than Scott Galloway, I haven’t come across him. Or her.” —Philip Elmer-DeWitt, Fortune
“Scott Galloway’s The Four is a bareback ride upon the four horses of the economic apocalypse – Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google. It is a timely exposition of the nature and concentration of power in the world today and, as a result, is much more than just a business book…The book contains more insights and provocative ideas than Amazon has Boeing 767s… My recommendation is to walk down to your local book store and buy this – or more likely, buy it on Amazon.”
Tom Upchurch, Wired
抜粋
Chapter 1
The Four
Over the last twenty years, four technology giants have inspired more joy, connections, prosperity, and discovery than any entity in history. Along the way, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google have created hundreds of thousands of high-paying jobs. The Four are responsible for an array of products and services that are entwined into the daily lives of billions of people. They've put a supercomputer in your pocket, are bringing the internet into developing countries, and are mapping the Earth's land mass and oceans. The Four have generated unprecedented wealth ($2.3 trillion) that, via stock ownership, has helped millions of families across the planet build economic security. In sum, they make the world a better place.
The above is true, and this narrative is espoused, repeatedly, across thousands of media outlets and gatherings of the innovation class (universities, conferences, congressional hearings, boardrooms). However, consider another view.
The Four Horsemen
Imagine: a retailer that refuses to pay sales tax, treats its employees poorly, destroys hundreds of thousands of jobs, and yet is celebrated as a paragon of business innovation.
A computer company that withholds information about a domestic act of terrorism from federal investigators, with the support of a fan following that views the firm similar to a religion.
A social media firm that analyzes thousands of images of your children, activates your phone as a listening device, and sells this information to Fortune 500 companies.
An ad platform that commands, in some markets, a 90 percent share of the most lucrative sector in media, yet avoids anti-competitive regulation through aggressive litigation and lobbyists.
This narrative is also heard around the world, but in hushed tones. We know these companies aren't benevolent beings, yet we invite them into the most intimate areas of our lives. We willingly divulge personal updates, knowing they'll be used for profit. Our media elevate the executives running these companies to hero status-geniuses to be trusted and emulated. Our governments grant them special treatment regarding anti-trust regulation, taxes, even labor laws. And investors bid their stocks up, providing near-infinite capital and firepower to attract the most talented people on the planet or crush adversaries.
So, are these entities the Four Horsemen of god, love, sex, and consumption? Or are they the Four Horsemen of the apocalypse? The answer is yes to both questions. I'll just call them the Four Horsemen.
How did these companies aggregate so much power? How can an inanimate, for-profit enterprise become so deeply ingrained in our psyche that it reshapes the rules of what a company can do and be? What does unprecedented scale and influence mean for the future of business and the global economy? Are they destined, like other business titans before them, to be eclipsed by younger, sexier rivals? Or have they become so entrenched that nobody-individual, enterprise, government, or otherwise-stands a chance?
State of Affairs
This is where the Four stand at the time of this writing:
Amazon: Shopping for a Porsche Panamera Turbo S or a pair of Louboutin lace pumps is fun. Shopping for toothpaste and eco-friendly diapers is not. As the online retailer of choice for most Americans, and increasingly, the world, Amazon eases the pain of drudgery-getting the stuff you need to survive. No great effort: no hunting, little gathering, just (one) clicking. Their formula: an unparalleled investment in last-mile infrastructure, made possible by an irrationally generous lender-retail investors who see the most compelling, yet simple, story ever told in business: Earth's Biggest Store. The story is coupled with execution that rivals D-Day (minus the whole courage and sacrifice to save the world part). The result is a retailer worth more than Walmart, Target, Macy's, Kroger, Nordstrom, Tiffany & Co., Coach, Williams-Sonoma, Tesco, Ikea, Carrefour, and The Gap combined.
As I write this, Jeff Bezos is the third wealthiest person in the world. He will soon be number one. The current gold and silver medalists, Bill Gates and Warren Buffet, are in great businesses (software and insurance), but neither sits on top of a company growing 20 percent plus each year, attacking multibillion dollar sectors like befuddled prey.
Apple: The Apple logo, which graces the most coveted laptops and mobile devices, is the global badge of wealth, education, and Western values. At its core, Apple fills two instinctual needs: to feel closer to God and be more attractive to the opposite sex. It mimics religion with its own belief system, objects of veneration, cult following, and Christ figure. It counts among its congregation the most important people in the world: the Innovation Class. By achieving a paradoxical goal in business-a low-cost product that sells for a premium price-Apple has become the most profitable company in history. The equivalent is an auto firm with the margins of Ferrari and the production volumes of Toyota. In Q4 of 2016, Apple registered twice the net profits Amazon has produced, in total, since its founding twenty-three years ago. Apple's cash on hand is nearly the GDP of Denmark.
Facebook: As measured by adoption and usage, Facebook is the most successful thing in the history of mankind. There are 7.5 billion people in the world, and 1.2 billion people have a daily relationship with Facebook. Facebook (#1), Facebook Messenger (#2), and Instagram (#8) are the most popular mobile apps in the United States. The social network and its properties register fifty minutes of a user's typical day. One of every six minutes online is spent on Facebook, and one in five minutes spent on mobile is on Facebook.
Google: Google is a modern man's god. It's our source of knowledge-ever-present, aware of our deepest secrets, reassuring us where we are and where we need to go, answering questions from trivial to profound. No institution has the trust and credibility of Google: About one out of six queries posed to the search engine have never been asked before. What rabbi, priest, scholar, or coach has so much gravitas that he or she is presented with that many questions never before asked of anybody? Who else inspires so many queries of the unknown from all corners of the world?
A subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., in 2016, Google earned $20 billion in profits, increased revenues 23 percent, and lowered cost to advertisers 11 percent-a massive blow to competitors. Google, unlike most products, ages in reverse, becoming more valuable with use. It harnesses the power of 2 billion people, twenty-four hours a day, connected by their intentions (what you want) and decisions (what you chose), yielding a whole infinitely greater than the sum of its parts. The insights into consumer behavior Google gleans from 3.5 billion queries each day make this horseman the executioner of traditional brands and media. Your new favorite brand is what Google returns to you in .0000005 second.
Show Me the Trillions
While billions of people derive significant value from these firms and their products, disturbingly few reap the economic benefits. General Motors created economic value of approximately $231,000 per employee (market cap/workforce). This sounds impressive until you realize that Facebook has created an enterprise worth $20.5 million per employee . . . or almost a hundred times the value per employee of the organizational icon of the last century. Imagine the economic output of a G-10 economy, generated by the population of Manhattan's Lower East Side.
The economic value accretion seems to be defying the law of big numbers and accelerating. In the last four years, April 1, 2013-April 1, 2017, the Four increased in value by approximately $1.3 trillion (GDP of Russia).
Other tech companies, old and new, big and bigger, are losing relevance. Aging behemoths, including HP and IBM, barely warrant the attention of the Four. Thousands of start-ups fly by like gnats hardly worth swatting at. Any firm that begins to show the potential to bother the Four is acquired-at prices lesser companies can't imagine. (Facebook paid nearly $20 billion for five-year-old, fifty-employee instant messaging company WhatsApp.) Ultimately, the only competitors the Four face are . . . each other.
Safety in Hatred
Governments, laws, and smaller firms appear helpless to stop the march, regardless of the Four's impact on business, society, or the planet. However, there's safety in hatred. Specifically, the Four hate each other. They are now competing directly, as their respective sectors are running out of easy prey.
Google signaled the end of the brand era as consumers, armed with search, no longer need to defer to the brand, hurting Apple, who also finds itself competing with Amazon in music and film. Amazon is Google's largest customer, but it's also threatening Google in search-55 percent of people searching for a product start on Amazon (vs. 28 percent on search engines such as Google). Apple and Amazon are running, full speed, into each other in front of us, on our TV screens and phones, as Google fights Apple to be the operating system of the product that defines our age, the smartphone.
Meanwhile, both Siri (Apple) and Alexa (Amazon) have entered the thunderdome, where two voices enter, and only one will leave. Among online advertisers, Facebook is now taking share from Google as it completes the great pivot from desktop to mobile. And the technology likely creating more wealth over the next decade, the cloud-a delivery of hosted services over the internet that can be spun up/down based on users' needs-features the Ali vs. Frazier battle of the tech age as Amazon and Google go head-to-head with their respective cloud offerings.
The Four are engaged in an epic race to become the operating system for our lives. The prize? A trillion-dollar-plus valuation, and power and influence greater than any entity in history.
So What?
To grasp the choices that ushered in the Four is to understand business and value creation in the digital age. In the first half of this book we'll examine each horseman and deconstruct their strategies and the lessons business leaders can draw from them.
In the second part of the book, we'll identify and set aside the mythology the Four allowed to flourish around the origins of their competitive advantage. Then we'll explore a new model for understanding how these companies exploit our basest instincts for growth and profitability, and show how the Four defend their markets with analog moats: real-world infrastructure designed to blunt attacks from potential competitors.
What are the horsemen's sins? How do they manipulate governments and competitors to steal IP? That's in chapter 8. Could there ever be a Fifth Horseman? In chapter 9, we'll evaluate the possible candidates, from Netflix to China's retail giant Alibaba, which dwarfs Amazon on many metrics. Do any of them have what it takes to develop a more dominant platform?
Finally, in chapter 10, we'll look at what professional attributes will help you thrive in the age of the Four. And in chapter 11, I'll talk about where the Four are taking us.
Alexa, Who Is Scott Galloway?
According to Alexa, "Scott Robert Galloway is an Australian professional football player who plays as a fullback for Central Coast Mariners in the A-League."
That bitch . . .
Anyway, while not a fullback, I've had a front-row seat to the Hunger Games of our age. I grew up in an upper-lower middle-class household, raised by a superhero (single mother) who worked as a secretary. After college I spent two years at Morgan Stanley in a misguided attempt to be successful and impress women. Investment banking is an awful job, full stop. In addition, I don't have possess the skills-maturity, discipline, humility, respect for institutions-to work in a big firm (that is, someone else), so I became an entrepreneur.
After business school, I founded Prophet, a brand strategy firm that has grown to 400 people helping consumer brands mimic Apple. In 1997, I founded Red Envelope, a multichannel retailer that went public in 2002 and was slowly bled to death by Amazon. In 2010, I founded L2, a firm that benchmarks the social, search, mobile, and site performance of the world's largest consumer and retail brands. We use data to help Nike, Chanel, L'Oreal, P&G, and one in four of the world's one hundred largest consumer firms scale these four summits. In March 2017, L2 was acquired by Gartner (NYSE: IT).
Along the way, I've served on the boards of media companies (The New York Times Company, Dex Media, Advanstar)-all getting crushed by Google and Facebook. I also served on the board of Gateway, which sold three times more computers annually than Apple, at a fifth the margin-it didn't end well. Finally, I've also served on the boards of Urban Outfitters and Eddie Bauer, each trying to protect their turf from the great white shark of retail, Amazon.
However, my business card, which I don't have, reads "Professor of Marketing." In 2002, I joined the faculty of NYU's Stern School of Business, where I teach brand strategy and digital marketing and have taught over six thousand students. It's a privileged role for me, as I'm the first person, on either side of my family, to graduate from high school. I'm the product of big government, specifically the University of California, which decided, despite my being a remarkably unremarkable kid, to give me something remarkable: upward mobility through a world-class education.
The pillars of a business school education-which (remarkably) does accelerate students' average salaries from $70,000 (applicants) to $100,000 plus (graduates) in just twenty-four months-are Finance, Marketing, Operations, and Management. This curriculum takes up students' entire first year, and the skills learned serve them well the rest of their professional lives. The second year of business school is mostly a waste: elective (that is, irrelevant) courses that fulfill the teaching requirements of tenured faculty and enable the kids to drink beer and travel to gain fascinating (worthless) insight into "Doing Business in Chile," a real course at Stern that gives students credits toward graduation.
We require a second year so we can charge tuition of $110,000 vs. $50,000 to support a welfare program for the overeducated: tenure. If we (universities) are to continue raising tuition faster than inflation, and we will, we'll need to build a better foundation for the second year. I believe the business fundamentals of the first year need to be supplemented with similar insights into how these skills are applied in a modern economy. The pillars of the second year should be a study of the Four and the sectors they operate in (search, social, brand, and retail). To better understand these firms, the instincts they tap into, and their intersection between technology and stakeholder value is to gain insight into modern-day business, our world, and ourselves.
At the beginning and end of every course at NYU Stern, I tell my students the goal of the course is to provide them with an edge so they too can build economic security for themselves and their families. I wrote this book for the same reason. I hope the reader gains insight and a competitive edge in an economy where it's never been easier to be a billionaire, but it's never been harder to be a millionaire.
The Four
Over the last twenty years, four technology giants have inspired more joy, connections, prosperity, and discovery than any entity in history. Along the way, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google have created hundreds of thousands of high-paying jobs. The Four are responsible for an array of products and services that are entwined into the daily lives of billions of people. They've put a supercomputer in your pocket, are bringing the internet into developing countries, and are mapping the Earth's land mass and oceans. The Four have generated unprecedented wealth ($2.3 trillion) that, via stock ownership, has helped millions of families across the planet build economic security. In sum, they make the world a better place.
The above is true, and this narrative is espoused, repeatedly, across thousands of media outlets and gatherings of the innovation class (universities, conferences, congressional hearings, boardrooms). However, consider another view.
The Four Horsemen
Imagine: a retailer that refuses to pay sales tax, treats its employees poorly, destroys hundreds of thousands of jobs, and yet is celebrated as a paragon of business innovation.
A computer company that withholds information about a domestic act of terrorism from federal investigators, with the support of a fan following that views the firm similar to a religion.
A social media firm that analyzes thousands of images of your children, activates your phone as a listening device, and sells this information to Fortune 500 companies.
An ad platform that commands, in some markets, a 90 percent share of the most lucrative sector in media, yet avoids anti-competitive regulation through aggressive litigation and lobbyists.
This narrative is also heard around the world, but in hushed tones. We know these companies aren't benevolent beings, yet we invite them into the most intimate areas of our lives. We willingly divulge personal updates, knowing they'll be used for profit. Our media elevate the executives running these companies to hero status-geniuses to be trusted and emulated. Our governments grant them special treatment regarding anti-trust regulation, taxes, even labor laws. And investors bid their stocks up, providing near-infinite capital and firepower to attract the most talented people on the planet or crush adversaries.
So, are these entities the Four Horsemen of god, love, sex, and consumption? Or are they the Four Horsemen of the apocalypse? The answer is yes to both questions. I'll just call them the Four Horsemen.
How did these companies aggregate so much power? How can an inanimate, for-profit enterprise become so deeply ingrained in our psyche that it reshapes the rules of what a company can do and be? What does unprecedented scale and influence mean for the future of business and the global economy? Are they destined, like other business titans before them, to be eclipsed by younger, sexier rivals? Or have they become so entrenched that nobody-individual, enterprise, government, or otherwise-stands a chance?
State of Affairs
This is where the Four stand at the time of this writing:
Amazon: Shopping for a Porsche Panamera Turbo S or a pair of Louboutin lace pumps is fun. Shopping for toothpaste and eco-friendly diapers is not. As the online retailer of choice for most Americans, and increasingly, the world, Amazon eases the pain of drudgery-getting the stuff you need to survive. No great effort: no hunting, little gathering, just (one) clicking. Their formula: an unparalleled investment in last-mile infrastructure, made possible by an irrationally generous lender-retail investors who see the most compelling, yet simple, story ever told in business: Earth's Biggest Store. The story is coupled with execution that rivals D-Day (minus the whole courage and sacrifice to save the world part). The result is a retailer worth more than Walmart, Target, Macy's, Kroger, Nordstrom, Tiffany & Co., Coach, Williams-Sonoma, Tesco, Ikea, Carrefour, and The Gap combined.
As I write this, Jeff Bezos is the third wealthiest person in the world. He will soon be number one. The current gold and silver medalists, Bill Gates and Warren Buffet, are in great businesses (software and insurance), but neither sits on top of a company growing 20 percent plus each year, attacking multibillion dollar sectors like befuddled prey.
Apple: The Apple logo, which graces the most coveted laptops and mobile devices, is the global badge of wealth, education, and Western values. At its core, Apple fills two instinctual needs: to feel closer to God and be more attractive to the opposite sex. It mimics religion with its own belief system, objects of veneration, cult following, and Christ figure. It counts among its congregation the most important people in the world: the Innovation Class. By achieving a paradoxical goal in business-a low-cost product that sells for a premium price-Apple has become the most profitable company in history. The equivalent is an auto firm with the margins of Ferrari and the production volumes of Toyota. In Q4 of 2016, Apple registered twice the net profits Amazon has produced, in total, since its founding twenty-three years ago. Apple's cash on hand is nearly the GDP of Denmark.
Facebook: As measured by adoption and usage, Facebook is the most successful thing in the history of mankind. There are 7.5 billion people in the world, and 1.2 billion people have a daily relationship with Facebook. Facebook (#1), Facebook Messenger (#2), and Instagram (#8) are the most popular mobile apps in the United States. The social network and its properties register fifty minutes of a user's typical day. One of every six minutes online is spent on Facebook, and one in five minutes spent on mobile is on Facebook.
Google: Google is a modern man's god. It's our source of knowledge-ever-present, aware of our deepest secrets, reassuring us where we are and where we need to go, answering questions from trivial to profound. No institution has the trust and credibility of Google: About one out of six queries posed to the search engine have never been asked before. What rabbi, priest, scholar, or coach has so much gravitas that he or she is presented with that many questions never before asked of anybody? Who else inspires so many queries of the unknown from all corners of the world?
A subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., in 2016, Google earned $20 billion in profits, increased revenues 23 percent, and lowered cost to advertisers 11 percent-a massive blow to competitors. Google, unlike most products, ages in reverse, becoming more valuable with use. It harnesses the power of 2 billion people, twenty-four hours a day, connected by their intentions (what you want) and decisions (what you chose), yielding a whole infinitely greater than the sum of its parts. The insights into consumer behavior Google gleans from 3.5 billion queries each day make this horseman the executioner of traditional brands and media. Your new favorite brand is what Google returns to you in .0000005 second.
Show Me the Trillions
While billions of people derive significant value from these firms and their products, disturbingly few reap the economic benefits. General Motors created economic value of approximately $231,000 per employee (market cap/workforce). This sounds impressive until you realize that Facebook has created an enterprise worth $20.5 million per employee . . . or almost a hundred times the value per employee of the organizational icon of the last century. Imagine the economic output of a G-10 economy, generated by the population of Manhattan's Lower East Side.
The economic value accretion seems to be defying the law of big numbers and accelerating. In the last four years, April 1, 2013-April 1, 2017, the Four increased in value by approximately $1.3 trillion (GDP of Russia).
Other tech companies, old and new, big and bigger, are losing relevance. Aging behemoths, including HP and IBM, barely warrant the attention of the Four. Thousands of start-ups fly by like gnats hardly worth swatting at. Any firm that begins to show the potential to bother the Four is acquired-at prices lesser companies can't imagine. (Facebook paid nearly $20 billion for five-year-old, fifty-employee instant messaging company WhatsApp.) Ultimately, the only competitors the Four face are . . . each other.
Safety in Hatred
Governments, laws, and smaller firms appear helpless to stop the march, regardless of the Four's impact on business, society, or the planet. However, there's safety in hatred. Specifically, the Four hate each other. They are now competing directly, as their respective sectors are running out of easy prey.
Google signaled the end of the brand era as consumers, armed with search, no longer need to defer to the brand, hurting Apple, who also finds itself competing with Amazon in music and film. Amazon is Google's largest customer, but it's also threatening Google in search-55 percent of people searching for a product start on Amazon (vs. 28 percent on search engines such as Google). Apple and Amazon are running, full speed, into each other in front of us, on our TV screens and phones, as Google fights Apple to be the operating system of the product that defines our age, the smartphone.
Meanwhile, both Siri (Apple) and Alexa (Amazon) have entered the thunderdome, where two voices enter, and only one will leave. Among online advertisers, Facebook is now taking share from Google as it completes the great pivot from desktop to mobile. And the technology likely creating more wealth over the next decade, the cloud-a delivery of hosted services over the internet that can be spun up/down based on users' needs-features the Ali vs. Frazier battle of the tech age as Amazon and Google go head-to-head with their respective cloud offerings.
The Four are engaged in an epic race to become the operating system for our lives. The prize? A trillion-dollar-plus valuation, and power and influence greater than any entity in history.
So What?
To grasp the choices that ushered in the Four is to understand business and value creation in the digital age. In the first half of this book we'll examine each horseman and deconstruct their strategies and the lessons business leaders can draw from them.
In the second part of the book, we'll identify and set aside the mythology the Four allowed to flourish around the origins of their competitive advantage. Then we'll explore a new model for understanding how these companies exploit our basest instincts for growth and profitability, and show how the Four defend their markets with analog moats: real-world infrastructure designed to blunt attacks from potential competitors.
What are the horsemen's sins? How do they manipulate governments and competitors to steal IP? That's in chapter 8. Could there ever be a Fifth Horseman? In chapter 9, we'll evaluate the possible candidates, from Netflix to China's retail giant Alibaba, which dwarfs Amazon on many metrics. Do any of them have what it takes to develop a more dominant platform?
Finally, in chapter 10, we'll look at what professional attributes will help you thrive in the age of the Four. And in chapter 11, I'll talk about where the Four are taking us.
Alexa, Who Is Scott Galloway?
According to Alexa, "Scott Robert Galloway is an Australian professional football player who plays as a fullback for Central Coast Mariners in the A-League."
That bitch . . .
Anyway, while not a fullback, I've had a front-row seat to the Hunger Games of our age. I grew up in an upper-lower middle-class household, raised by a superhero (single mother) who worked as a secretary. After college I spent two years at Morgan Stanley in a misguided attempt to be successful and impress women. Investment banking is an awful job, full stop. In addition, I don't have possess the skills-maturity, discipline, humility, respect for institutions-to work in a big firm (that is, someone else), so I became an entrepreneur.
After business school, I founded Prophet, a brand strategy firm that has grown to 400 people helping consumer brands mimic Apple. In 1997, I founded Red Envelope, a multichannel retailer that went public in 2002 and was slowly bled to death by Amazon. In 2010, I founded L2, a firm that benchmarks the social, search, mobile, and site performance of the world's largest consumer and retail brands. We use data to help Nike, Chanel, L'Oreal, P&G, and one in four of the world's one hundred largest consumer firms scale these four summits. In March 2017, L2 was acquired by Gartner (NYSE: IT).
Along the way, I've served on the boards of media companies (The New York Times Company, Dex Media, Advanstar)-all getting crushed by Google and Facebook. I also served on the board of Gateway, which sold three times more computers annually than Apple, at a fifth the margin-it didn't end well. Finally, I've also served on the boards of Urban Outfitters and Eddie Bauer, each trying to protect their turf from the great white shark of retail, Amazon.
However, my business card, which I don't have, reads "Professor of Marketing." In 2002, I joined the faculty of NYU's Stern School of Business, where I teach brand strategy and digital marketing and have taught over six thousand students. It's a privileged role for me, as I'm the first person, on either side of my family, to graduate from high school. I'm the product of big government, specifically the University of California, which decided, despite my being a remarkably unremarkable kid, to give me something remarkable: upward mobility through a world-class education.
The pillars of a business school education-which (remarkably) does accelerate students' average salaries from $70,000 (applicants) to $100,000 plus (graduates) in just twenty-four months-are Finance, Marketing, Operations, and Management. This curriculum takes up students' entire first year, and the skills learned serve them well the rest of their professional lives. The second year of business school is mostly a waste: elective (that is, irrelevant) courses that fulfill the teaching requirements of tenured faculty and enable the kids to drink beer and travel to gain fascinating (worthless) insight into "Doing Business in Chile," a real course at Stern that gives students credits toward graduation.
We require a second year so we can charge tuition of $110,000 vs. $50,000 to support a welfare program for the overeducated: tenure. If we (universities) are to continue raising tuition faster than inflation, and we will, we'll need to build a better foundation for the second year. I believe the business fundamentals of the first year need to be supplemented with similar insights into how these skills are applied in a modern economy. The pillars of the second year should be a study of the Four and the sectors they operate in (search, social, brand, and retail). To better understand these firms, the instincts they tap into, and their intersection between technology and stakeholder value is to gain insight into modern-day business, our world, and ourselves.
At the beginning and end of every course at NYU Stern, I tell my students the goal of the course is to provide them with an edge so they too can build economic security for themselves and their families. I wrote this book for the same reason. I hope the reader gains insight and a competitive edge in an economy where it's never been easier to be a billionaire, but it's never been harder to be a millionaire.
著者について
Scott Galloway is a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, where he teaches brand strategy and digital marketing to second-year MBA students. A serial entrepreneur, he has founded nine firms, including L2, Red Envelope, and Prophet. In 2012, he was named one of the “World’s 50 Best Business School Professors” by Poets & Quants. His weekly YouTube series, “Winners and Losers,” has generated tens of millions of views. This is his first book.
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レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
2023年3月12日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
2020年10月21日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
大学生向けの教科書なのだろう。割に平易な単語と、率直なスラング、暴言で読みやすい。健全な経済とは何か、おそらく絶対的な解答などない命題に、これから挑まなくてはならない若者に対して、一つの手がかりになる本である。
2023年10月5日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
本の状態は説明通りでした。配達日も予定通りに届きました。
2019年12月23日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
〇著者は、まず、饒舌に軽いタッチでアマゾン、アップル、フェイスブック、グーグルの4社がいかにすごいか、何がすごいかを独断を交えて説明する本。そこで言っていることは至ってシンプルだ。
〇Amazonは、投資家にストーリー(世界最大の小売りになる)を提示して支持を得ているがゆえに、巨額の利益を配当せず投資に使える。だから他の追随を許さない新しいサービス(多数の倉庫に支えられたロジスティクス。レジ不要の小売店など)を提供することができる。
〇Appleは、その製品をある種のぜいたく品として販売してきた。だから多額のプレミアム(利益)を手に入れることができている。
〇Facebookは、利用者が自主的に提供する個人情報(属性、好みなど)を元にターゲットを絞った効果的な広告サービスをクライアントに提供できている。
〇Googleは、もっと汎用的なサーチエンジンだ。利用者の検索リクエストからその嗜好を探りだして最適の広告をぶつけることによって巨額の広告料を稼ぐ。
〇しかし企業に永遠はない。必ず衰退する。大企業になると目が行き届かなくなり、人を失い(ベストの才能を確保できなくなる。彼らは小規模な起業に向かう)、革新力を失い、政府による規制(独禁法による制約)を受けるようになる。
〇このあたりから雰囲気が大きく変わる。著者の意図は、the fourの礼賛ではなかった。10章では、若い人たちにこれからのキャリアの積み方について、実に懇切丁寧かつ正直なアドバイスを送る(そうだ、この人は教師でもあった)。11章では、the fourが社会にもたらす問題について論ずる。「全体とすれば、化石燃料は人類に良い影響を与えている。しかしそれによって発生する問題を見逃すわけにはいかない。The fourもおなじことだ」と言う。青少年の心身に与える悪影響、雇用を生まないためのミドルクラスの破壊(貿易が原因ではない、と著者は言う)、格差の拡大などを真摯に提示する。そして、そろそろthe fourにブレーキをかけなければならないと言う。著者が言いたかったことは、「the four を分割すべし。The fourが悪いからではない。我々が資本主義、市場主義に生きているからだ。企業が巨大になりすぎて弊害が目立つようになったらレフリー(政府)が介入して分割するというのがそもそもの市場経済のあるべき姿なのだ」ということだった。物事の原点を忘れずこれに立ち戻る姿勢に共感する。
〇Amazonは、投資家にストーリー(世界最大の小売りになる)を提示して支持を得ているがゆえに、巨額の利益を配当せず投資に使える。だから他の追随を許さない新しいサービス(多数の倉庫に支えられたロジスティクス。レジ不要の小売店など)を提供することができる。
〇Appleは、その製品をある種のぜいたく品として販売してきた。だから多額のプレミアム(利益)を手に入れることができている。
〇Facebookは、利用者が自主的に提供する個人情報(属性、好みなど)を元にターゲットを絞った効果的な広告サービスをクライアントに提供できている。
〇Googleは、もっと汎用的なサーチエンジンだ。利用者の検索リクエストからその嗜好を探りだして最適の広告をぶつけることによって巨額の広告料を稼ぐ。
〇しかし企業に永遠はない。必ず衰退する。大企業になると目が行き届かなくなり、人を失い(ベストの才能を確保できなくなる。彼らは小規模な起業に向かう)、革新力を失い、政府による規制(独禁法による制約)を受けるようになる。
〇このあたりから雰囲気が大きく変わる。著者の意図は、the fourの礼賛ではなかった。10章では、若い人たちにこれからのキャリアの積み方について、実に懇切丁寧かつ正直なアドバイスを送る(そうだ、この人は教師でもあった)。11章では、the fourが社会にもたらす問題について論ずる。「全体とすれば、化石燃料は人類に良い影響を与えている。しかしそれによって発生する問題を見逃すわけにはいかない。The fourもおなじことだ」と言う。青少年の心身に与える悪影響、雇用を生まないためのミドルクラスの破壊(貿易が原因ではない、と著者は言う)、格差の拡大などを真摯に提示する。そして、そろそろthe fourにブレーキをかけなければならないと言う。著者が言いたかったことは、「the four を分割すべし。The fourが悪いからではない。我々が資本主義、市場主義に生きているからだ。企業が巨大になりすぎて弊害が目立つようになったらレフリー(政府)が介入して分割するというのがそもそもの市場経済のあるべき姿なのだ」ということだった。物事の原点を忘れずこれに立ち戻る姿勢に共感する。
2020年10月3日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
申し訳ないが、活字が小さく高齢者である私には読めなかったので、返品させて頂いた。返品手続きはとてもスムースで、ありがたかった。
2018年10月21日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
連続起業家にして、大学教授。 TEDトークでの映像も、100万視聴を超える。 そのテッドトークさながらのエネルギッシュな文章でGAFAについての分析が進む。 題をGAFAとせず、four と小文字で表記したのも彼の思いがあるのだろう。 それぞれの分析は辛らつで面白い。 しかし、終章に近づくと、学生向けの、良い大学へ行けとの記述があり、想定読者が誰だったのか少し面食らうところがある。
2021年9月12日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入

2019年2月19日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
Oftentimes, it’s very funny/entertaining to read
他の国からのトップレビュー

Saurabh Sinha
5つ星のうち5.0
Must read book
2023年10月26日にインドでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Though many books have been written on technology and the way Big Tech companies function, The Four by Scott Galloway stands out. It describes the functioning of the companies in a very simple manner and lists compelling reasons to break the network effects created by the Big Tech.
The hard hitting thought provoking views by the author may leave the reader contemplating on seriously taking such a step. The last chapter and the last paragraph in particular is specially very interesting.
The hard hitting thought provoking views by the author may leave the reader contemplating on seriously taking such a step. The last chapter and the last paragraph in particular is specially very interesting.

paola castillo
5つ星のうち5.0
Great
2022年4月22日にスペインでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Perfecto to travel

Mauricio Flores Guillermo
5つ星のうち5.0
Emprendedores
2020年1月2日にメキシコでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
El libro te da un detalle de lo que sucede dentro de estas 4 grandes empresas que casi no lees en las noticias o en las redes.Principalmente se identifican las variables que le dan ese impulso adicional que otras empresas con características similares no tienen.

Curtis P Olson
5つ星のうち5.0
Great book.
2018年10月19日にカナダでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Bought this after watching a YouTube video of Scott Galloway speaking. It delivered much more depth and insight which is what I was hoping for. Fascinating study into how FB, Amazon, Apple and Google have permeated so much of our lives.

Fonaweb
5つ星のうち5.0
Genuinely scary but....
2020年1月2日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Unputdownable and brilliant analysis of why the four digital giants are successful and all the underhanded ways they get you to do things and buy stuff. But like "Dow 36,000", books about Japan in the early 1990s, books about real estate in 2005, books about China now and all the other books that put forward the inevitable dominance of the current most fashionable capitalist concept (big data and its uses), the seeds of downfall and destruction are already sown. It's like when you read about a company on the front page, it's the beginning of the end - in these cases, a collective decision to switch off and get out more, plus "peak stuff". So scary - but not that scary.