Categories
Books People Technology PR Web/Tech

Dan Roam’s “Back of a Napkin” approach to visual thinking (and how I bought the book).

Dan Roam’s “The Back of the Napkin” book about visual thinking is a novel approach to problem solving (and deserves a blog post all of its own)

Informative blog too.

However, I thought it worth examining how I went from not knowing a thing about Dan Roam at midday on Saturday, to understanding a lot more about him and buying his book nearly 11 hours later – as well as finding out a few other interesting things along the way.

Here’s the text based version of events (the diagram above is my own pen and paper effort based on Roam’s tips).

1. My wife buys a copy of The Guardian on Saturday. Leaves me the Sport, Money and Work sections.

2. I look at the front page of the Work Section. Feature entitled “Sketch It Out”. I read about Dan Roam’s book The Back of The Napkin – all about visual thinking and how to use drawing as a highly efficient aid to problem solving (Key message: you don’t need to be able to draw). Note: Guardian offers book to readers for £14.99 – I decide to do more research before committing to buying – and will certainly check Amazon first before buying.

3. Intrigued, I decide later that evening to Google Dan Roam. Top result is for Digital Roam, his own company. Spend a few mins looking at website – then check out his blog. Some very interesting posts

4. Download some PDFs of his visual thinking toolkit – Napkin Tools.

5. Watch Youtube video of Dan Roam presenting to Google staff.

6. Subscribe to Dan Roam’s RSS Feed

6. Decide to buy book (£9.99). Go to Amazon.co.uk to purchase. End up buying another book – Garr Reynolds Presentation Zen – purely on the back of Amazon recommendations (and because I was in book buying mood).

7. Via Dan Roam’s blog, go to Hans Rosling’s Gapminder.org and Ted.com video – now that’s how to present data!

You may think this is an extraordinary effort to decide whether or not to buy a book. But it is only when you detail all the various elements that went into this particular buying process that you begin to understand some of complexity of PR and marketing today.

And Dan Roam and Garr Reynolds both got a book sale out of me – although the routes to each one were very different. And Hans Rosling’s work was a revelation. What a wonderful world we live in.

7 replies on “Dan Roam’s “Back of a Napkin” approach to visual thinking (and how I bought the book).”

Wow Andrew — this is a great post. It is an amazing (and amazingly clear) view into the real process that real readers go through to really buy a book.

You’ll be happy to know that I sent it to my publisher, publicist, agent, and everybody else I know in publishing as a reminder of all the bits we need to push on and maintain to attract a potential buyer.

I’ve blogged your blog myself, thus bringing this into a disconcertingly full loop. There’s something very twenty-first century about all this, but I can’t quite put my finger on it. 🙂

http://www.digitalroam.typepad.com

– Dan Roam
Author of “The Back of the Napkin”

Dan – appreciate your comments (and for the reciprocal blog post and link forwarding!), There is indeed something rather wild in reading about an author, buying his book and then having direct contact with the author within a few days.

I guess at the end of the day what are really “selling” is a whole conceptual methodology and framework – the book is simply one aspect of a whole ecosystem that incorporates your company website, blog, YouTube, etc – it is an increasingly complex world we live – but perhaps thanks to your book, the humble pen and paper may well prove our saviour 😉

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.