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The Digital Enterprise
The Digital Enterprise
Oct 24, 2024 5:22 AM

Author:Kay Henning

The Digital Enterprise

First published in 1999, The Digital Enterprise gives the historical context which gave rise to the digital industry, assesses the key sectors of the industry and outlines new business opportunities in the media, the entertainments business and the retail sector. It describes the challenges to business and how these can be met, and also looks to the digital future.

Reviews

Readers will never take coffee for granted or overlook the struggles of Yemen after ingesting Eggers's phenomenally well-written, juggernaut tale of an intrepid and irresistible entrepreneur on a complex and meaningful mission, a highly caffeinated adventure story

—— Booklist

A most improbable and uplifting success story... Eggers offers an appealing hybrid: a biography of a charming, industrious Muslim man who has more ambition than direction; a capsule history of coffee and its origins, growth, and development as a mass commodity and then as a niche product; the story of Blue Bottle, the elite coffee chain in San Francisco that some suspect (and some fear) could turn into the next Starbucks; an adventure story of civil war in a foreign country... It is hard to resist the derring-do of the Horatio Alger of Yemenite coffee

—— Kirkus

The remarkable true story of a Yemeni coffee farmer... A vibrant depiction of courage and passion, interwoven with a detailed history of Yemeni coffee and a timely exploration of Muslim American identity

—— Entertainment Weekly

Works as both a heart-warming success story with a winning central character and an account of real-life adventures that read with the vividness of fiction

—— Publishers Weekly

It'll open your eyes - very wide - to the singular origins of your single origin

—— Esquire (UK)

Definitely one for book club

—— Elle (UK)

Eggers's narrative is guaranteed to be every bit as compelling as that of any novel

—— The Observer

Dave Eggers returns to his "factional" mode with The Monk Of Mokha, in which a Yemeni immigrant to the US discovers an obsession with coffee, returns home, and is caught in a war. Given his previous form with What Is The What and Zeitoun I have high hopes of this book

—— The Scostman

This is a book that celebrates ethnic diversity and the exuberance of the human spirit

—— Mail on Sunday

[Dave Eggers] is on a mission to use the platform he has created as a writer/activist to give direct voice to the marginalised or unheard... No story is more urgent

—— Observer

Bridgemakers such as Mokhtar courageously embody America's reason for being - as a place of radical opportunity and ceaseless welcome... a blended people united not by stasis and cowardice and fear, but by irrational exuberance, by global enterprise on a human scale

—— The Guardian

It's hard to imagine ALkhanshali's story being told with more pace, scope or sensitivity. An extraordinary adventure

—— The Times

Mokhtar's story is a remarkable one, full of derring-do, tenacity and exceptional luck

—— Metro

It is impossible not to root for Mokhtar. And as with all good bildungsromans, it is as much the reader as the hero who receives an education

—— The Daily Telegraph

Brad Stone's The Upstarts reads like a detective story: A page turning who-did-it on the creation of billion dollar fortunes and the ruthless murder of traditional businesses. No single book will tell you more about what life feels like inside companies like Airbnb and Uber as they grow from mere ideas into merciless machines for innovation, riches and unease. The sweat. The stress. The power highs of new instant fortunes. It's all here. You won't be able to put The Upstarts down. And when you finally do, you'll look at your own company and career in a totally fresh way.

—— Joshua Cooper Ramo, author of The Seventh Sense

Brad Stone gives us a lively, fascinating picture of the new new thing in technology - startups like Uber and Airbnb that are disrupting old businesses across the world. He provides a much needed glimpse into the companies that fail as well as the ones that make it big. And he points to the broad policy issues raised by these new technologies, which are surely no fun for the people whose lives are being disrupted.

——
Fareed Zakaria, author of The Post-American World

For a flavour of how fast the world is changing, turn to Brad Stone’s The Upstarts

—— Director

Brad Stone unravels the facts from the mythology surrounding the companies’ rise

—— Harvard Business Review

A penetrating study marked by the same thorough reporting that distinguished [The Everything Store]

—— SF Gate
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