By: Rev Jacob Bolton on November 11, 2019
Scott Galloway teaches advanced courses to MBA students at NYU’s Stern School of Business. He is a widely recognized economics professor and has founded over nine firms. In the book The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google, Galloway “provides a perceptive analysis of the four-horse race to become the first trillion-dollar…
By: John Muhanji on November 11, 2019
We have the term “the world is a global market” from wherever we are. When it comes to economies of the world, spirituality, and other social concerns, the Africa countries have always found themselves victims of the situations. I am reminded during the time of the early missionaries in Kenya. They arrived in style from…
By: Shermika Harvey on November 10, 2019
In the 1980s, the dream of a futuristic world was seen through the lens of innocent childhood with a Disney whimsical twist. The days where technology and humankind operate inseparably was an intriguing quest set out by man. The days where innovators and dreamers need(ed) to stick together.[1] As the years continued in the late 1990s…
By: Digby Wilkinson on November 9, 2019
Disclaimer. I use all the following products wth a sense of deep guilt. However, that guilt is not quite deep enough to eradicate these products from my life. Please accept my (almost)apology in advance. I must say, for a man who spends his life in economics, teaching business, attending prestigious company boards and making vast…
By: Mary Mims on November 9, 2019
When my daughter was young and she wanted something that I told her we could not afford, she would simply reply, “just go to the ATM, Mom”. To my young daughter, born in the early 1980s, money was something that came out of the machine with the press of a few numbers, not something you…
By: Nancy VanderRoest on November 9, 2019
The Four is a raw book about the four tech giants that play a major role in today’s society. I found it interesting that the author related these four companies to the Four Horseman in the Bible. I also thought it fascinating that the author noted that these giants exist because of consumer demand. The…
By: Karen Rouggly on November 8, 2019
I admit it – I read this book cover to cover. While I realize that we don’t generally have time for that (and I don’t usually), I made time for this book this week. I found myself gripped each night and felt like I couldn’t put it down. I can’t tell if it was the…
By: Rhonda Davis on November 8, 2019
Reading books like The Four, leave me exhausted. Not only is it frustrating to consider the rate of change we experience every day, but I am also fatigued by the expectation this places on me as the consumer. I am left feeling like a refugee in my own homeland, an exile in what David Kinnaman…
By: Sean Dean on November 7, 2019
I do not have anything witty or inspiring to say about any of these companies. I had planned on writing about how I fell out of love with Apple and found my way to open source software with its welcoming of all users. But the more I wrote the more it felt like I was…
By: Tammy Dunahoo on November 7, 2019
15 The Lord God took the man and placed him in the orchard in Eden to care for it and to maintain it. 16 Then the Lord God commanded the man, “You may freely eat fruit from every tree of the orchard, 17 but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from…
By: Jenn Burnett on November 7, 2019
Do you remember the revulsion you felt when you first learned where meat came from? That visceral reaction is how I felt reading through Scott Galloway’s The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google. The food on your plate becomes unappetising when you learn it once had a face. (Perhaps more so…
By: Andrea Lathrop on November 7, 2019
Scott Galloway, author of The Four, offers his lessons for navigating the new reality we are all living in with Facebook, Amazon, Apple and Google. I am better informed and can be a more conscientious consumer with this peek behind the curtain. I thought of Newport’s reference many times – that these kinds of innovators…
By: Harry Fritzenschaft on November 7, 2019
Scott Galloway, Professor of Marketing at the NYU Stern School of Business’s, argues in his book, The Four: the hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google, that ‘The Four’ have amassed abundant influence upon our lifestyles to enable our dependency upon them while dominating their growing share of the consumer market. While ‘The Four” have…
By: Harry Edwards on November 7, 2019
As I write this there are no less than seven stories in this morning’s paper lambasting the intemperate excesses of large companies that have resulted in large scale privacy loss, antitrust violations and billions worth of lost capital. Not surprisingly, Facebook, one of the four horsemen in Scott Galloway’s book The Four: The Hidden DNA…
By: Mario Hood on November 7, 2019
In a recent podcast of Building a StoryBrand Donald Miller, the guest explained that even though Amazon stock was at an all-time high, this was still the best time to buy the stock. When pressed for the reason why the guest said because this is the lowest it will ever be. He continued and said…
By: John Muhanji on November 4, 2019
We are living in a time of selflessness and confusion. It is coming out clear that there is nothing new under the sun but instead confusion from reigns the present. Friedman, an ordained Rabbi, describes this act of our confusion as he writes, “A society cannot evolve, no matter how much freedom is guaranteed, when…
By: Wallace Kamau on November 2, 2019
Scott Galloway, a Professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, is a serial entrepreneur and good at his work of teaching, being named as one of the “World’s 50 best Business School Professors” by Poets & Quarts. His work in this book is outstanding and he has great understanding of business which is…
By: John Muhanji on October 28, 2019
It is very encouraging and enriching to read from such a person full of leadership knowledge and I wonder where to classify him, either under the one who is full of wisdom or knowledge. His vast knowledge and leadership influence and writer of great materials in leadership reflects his great experience in leadership. Kets…
By: Nancy VanderRoest on October 27, 2019
As one of my precious Hospice patients was saying goodbye to earth recently, I told her that it was ok to let go and that God was waiting for her when she was ready. On one of the last days of her life, she looked at me in her nearly catatonic state and clearly spoke:…
By: Mary Mims on October 26, 2019
Often students studying for their college entrance exams (SAT), review words they believe will have a likelihood of appearing on their exams. Many schools write the SAT Word of the Day on white boards for students to learn in preparation for the test. Manfred F. R. Kets de Vries uses the word “obsequiousness” frequently, like…