August 6, 2001:
Talan Solutions Announces Partnership with Doug Elwell, Inc.
Talan Solutions Partnership Provides Robust Offering of eBusiness and Market Presence Enablement
VERNON HILLS, Illinois July 19, 2001 Talan Solutions, Inc., a premier provider of application development and systems integration services, today announced its partnership with Doug Elwell, Inc., a quality provider of communications consulting services. By joining forces, the two companies create powerful web-based solutions that engage market interest and are technically superior.
"Our customers look to us as system architects to implement technology that improves their business processes and enables new business strategies," said Scott Sax, Executive Director of Talan Solutions. "Now, with the expertise of DEI, we can provide market analysis for both internal and external customers, construct meaningful, targeted user interfaces, and assist customers with branding and other communications strategies."
The partnership will generally focus on creating user interfaces for external applications, such as eCommerce storefronts as well as internal applications with significant usability requirements, such as portals for large organizations. These types of applications benefit greatly from market analysis, branding efforts, and well thought out graphic design.
"DEI focuses on providing our customers with quality user interfaces that are both attractive and easy to use. Web, print, or multimedia, it's all about enhancing our client's ability to successfully communicate their ideas, products, and/or services to their customers in order to maximize their potential for success in the marketplace. We look forward to working with Talan to help ensure their clients' success," said Doug Elwell, President of Doug Elwell, Inc.
About Talan Solutions
Talan Solutions is a premier provider of I/T solutions consulting services, focusing on application development and systems integration. Working with clients ranging from start-up to Fortune 100, Talan Solutions implements technology through custom software development, package integration, and other services to optimize business processes and enable new business strategies. Talan Solutions leverages expertise in many technologies across a variety of computing platforms. Founded in 2000, Talan Solutions is headquartered in Vernon Hills, Illinois. To learn more, visit Talan Solutions at http://www.talansolutions.com, or call Talan Solutions at 847-247-4353.
About DEI
Doug Elwell, Inc., (DEI) is a client-focused communications consulting company focusing on comprehensive and coordinated solutions for corporate identity, web, print, multimedia, applications, and general communications design and development. For more information, visit http://www.dougelwell.com, call 630-665-1595, fax 630-665-1373, or email doug@dougelwell.com.
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[Note: Partnership is informal in nature and non-binding. Both Talan Solutions, Inc. and Doug Elwell, Inc. are independently owned and
operated, separate legal entities.]
Brand Warfare: 10 Rules for Building the Killer Brand
David F. D'Alessandro
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Powerful lessons on how to build and sustain your own "killer brand".
Creating and sustaining a good brand is the most complex and perilous task any business will ever face, yet nothing is as misunderstood. Under the direction of marketing wizard David D'Alessandro, John Hancock transformed itself from a sleepy old life insurer into a leading financial services giant, with a sustained 20% annual rate of growth. In Brand Warfare, D'Alessandro draws on his personal experience as a brand-builder and examples from America's smartest and most foolish corporations, developing principles that you can use in any market. At the same time, he creates an entertaining picture of the marketing business with anecdotes that convey a keen sense of the absurdities of corporate life, balanced by a tremendous respect for the consumer.
This tough-minded, funny, and refreshingly candid book gives you a proven roadmap for marketing success as you learn:
Why every business needs a good brand to compete
Why consumers need good brands as much as good brands need them
Why sycophancy from the agency and meddling from inside the company will sink your campaign every time
About sponsorship: how to avoid being taken, and how to make the investment pay for your brand
Why it's as important to market your brand to your employees as it is to your customers
Why every business decision should be filtered through the prism of the brand
Gonzo Marketing: Winning Through Worst Practices
Christopher Locke
Rating:
The coauthor of the no-more-business-as-usual blockbuster
The Cluetrain Manifesto which basically told Net-age marketers to stop talking at their markets and start conversing with them follows up with a book that's more a highly entertaining, nimbly erudite screed against our current mass-market, mass-media culture than it is a recipe book for e-commerce marketing success in the post-cyberboom era. Writing in a paler imitation of the profanely irreverent, freely associative "gonzo" journalism style pioneered by his obvious idol
Hunter S. Thompson,
Locke starts with the by-now-familiar idea that old-style mass-marketing "broadcast" advertising just won't work on the Web. Indeed, he says, conventional print-ad tactics as embodied online by banners and pop-ups might actually generate more ill will than sales, and that's why companies must use the Web to somehow enjoin their products and services to the quirky niche interests of the gazillion individual cybercommunities (or "micromarkets") whose greatest advantage for marketers is how freely and speedily their members talk among themselves, touting a brand when and if it's truly deserved.
The Virtue of Prosperity:
Finding Values In An Age Of Techno-Affluence
Dinesh D'Souza
Rating:
In The Virtue of Prosperity, former White House policy analyst Dinesh D'Souza offers the first
in-depth analysis of the spiritual and social crisis that has been spawned by the New Economy and
new technologies.
The chief problem societies have faced "since the time of the Babylonians," writes Dinesh D'Souza,
has been the problem of scarcity. "But now that age has passed, and America has a new problem: coping
with prosperity." It's a good problem to have, but also a serious, even debilitating, one. "The moral
conundrum of success," the author continues, means that all too often, "the body is flourishing, but
somehow the soul still feels malnourished." D'Souza is well known for his bestselling conservative
books
Illiberal Education,
The End of Racism,
and
Ronald Reagan.
On these pages, however, he seems to
set politics aside to ask deep questions about the meaning of life in a world of material abundance.
(Review by Amazon.com)
The Monk and the Riddle:
The Education of a Silicon Valley Entrepreneur
Randy Komisar, Kent L. Lineback (Contributor)
Rating:
Prospective entrepreneurs may think they know everything there is to know about starting a business in Silicon Valley. They can draw up business plans, have meetings with venture capitalists, maybe even get funded and actually launch a start-up. However, in The Monk and the Riddle, Silicon Valley sage Randy Komisar reasons that's only half the equation for success. And it may not be the important half. Komisar has worked with a number of companies Apple, LucasArts Entertainment (the gaming division of George Lucas's empire), and WebTV among them and has come to a rather startling conclusion: if you can't see yourself doing this business for the rest of your life, don't start it. In other words, he wants to see passion and purpose in business, not just spreadsheets and a by-the-numbers business model.
To illustrate, Komisar takes the reader through a hypothetical Silicon Valley start-up, with an eager entrepreneur named Lenny trying to get funding for an online casket-selling business. As Komisar helps Lenny find the real purpose of the business, the passion behind the revenue projections, he reflects back on his life as an entrepreneur. Komisar emerges as a master storyteller, the kind of guy you'd feel honored to share a bottle of wine with. And you believe his conclusion: "When all is said and done, the journey is the reward." It's great if you've made billions on the journey, but the important thing is that you do something you can truly throw yourself into.
(Review by Amazon.com)
Burn Rate
Michael Wolff
Journalist Michael Wolff is a recognized pioneer in the business of cyberspace, meaning he has been developing products and services for the online world since the dark ages of 1994. During the intervening years, however, not all the activities he engaged in, nor all the people he dealt with, left a pleasant taste in his mouth - although, to be sure, his cumulative adventures certainly have been very lucrative.
In Burn Rate: How I Survived the Gold Rush Years on the Internet, Wolff pulls few punches as he candidly and methodically recounts the single steps forward and multiple steps back that marked his experiences while trying to transform a fledgling print media enterprise into a towering New Media colossus. After developing a series of
"NetGuide"
books that proved hugely successful, he attempted to transfer the concept to a variety of online offshoots and in so doing connected with
Wired
magazine, Time-Warner's Pathfinder, the late Robert Maxwell's media empire,
AOL
, assorted venture capitalists, sundry competitors, and numerous would-be partners. Burn Rate is a fascinating tale
that might best be characterized by the old adage that warns us to "be careful what we wish for, for we just might get it."
(Review by Amazon.com)
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