I think every market has lot of things in common, and at the same time, every market has lot of different things.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think there is a niche for every market.
The market turns out to be just one special case of collective decision-making.
I had always been interested in markets - specifically, the theory that in financial markets, goods will trade at a fair value only when everyone has access to the same information.
We don't market products narrowly. We market big stories about the industry, things that matter to a lot of people.
Most marketers think there's a concept called a product life cycle. Once you realize that the world is organized by jobs that need to be done, you understand that product life cycles don't exist.
Markets do very weird things because it reacts to how people behave, and sometimes people are a little screwy.
The tension between centrality, on the one hand, and competition, on the other, is probably the oldest of all market structure issues.
Anytime there is a new, interesting space that comes along, there are a bunch of companies that enter the market.
There are values of humanity, culture, beauty, community that may require deviations from the cold logic of market theory.
The way deals are done, every idea is looked at 50 different ways. Now, the market continues to change all the time. And we are always looking at everything in evaluating how it fits with our strategy.
No opposing quotes found.