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  1 The Upstarts: How Uber, Airbnb, and the Killer Companies of the New Silicon Valley Are Changing the World
Author: Stone, Brad
 
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Class: 658.02
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: HD62.5
Print Run: 100000
ISBN-13: 9780316388399
LCCN: 2016958932
Imprint: Little, Brown and Company
Pub Date: 01/31/2017
Availability: Available
List: $30.00
  Hardcover
Physical Description: x, 372 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm H 9.5", W 6.25", D 1.125", 1.4 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles
Bibliographies: Public Library Core Collection: Nonfiction, 17th ed.
Awards: Library Journal Best Books
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Business
Technology
Computers/Computer Programming
BISAC Subjects: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Entrepreneurship
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Industries / Computers & Information Technology
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Technical & Manufacturing Industries & Trades
LC Subjects: Airbnb (Firm)
Bed and breakfast accommodations, United States, 21st century
Electronic commerce, United States
Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship, United States, Case studies
New business enterprises
New business enterprises, United States, Case studies
Ridesharing, United States, 21st century
Success in business
Uber (Firm)
SEARS Subjects: New business enterprises
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Adult Titles | 11/01/2016
Publisher Annotation: In 2007, the crash had Wall Street and Silicon Valley reeling. The original renegades like Steve Jobs were now the establishment, and tech had become a way of life for suburban moms as much as for visionaries. The Valley was ready for a new revolution. Enter THE UPSTARTS. Genius entrepreneurs with no lack of self-confidence created companies that turned our expectations on their heads. Travis Kalanick of Uber and Brian Chesky of Airbnb are just two of the disrupters Brad Stone examines in this fly-on-the-wall look at the intersection of tech, business, and culture. With unprecedented access to all the key players, Stone illuminates the smart, driven, and often comically flawed people who are upending industries and changing the way we all live and work. 384pp., 100K
Journal Reviews
Kirkus Reviews | 01/01/2017
Celebratory biography of the upstart companies that regulators love to hate. It was just eight years ago that Barack Obama was sworn into the presidency for his first term, a time of newborn hope in the heart of a grim depression. Enter an air mattress, a couple of smart youngsters, and the realization that unused guest rooms could be leveraged into extra bucks, and you have a new player in the service economy: Airbnb. You also have, writes Bloomberg News senior executive editor Stone (The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon, 2013, etc.), a mess of controversy: housing costs go up, desirable neighborhoods get more crowded, hotels that pay their taxes go unfilled as guerrilla operators offer cheaper alternatives. In all this, there's the new middleman, those smart youngsters. The same story plays out with the rise of Uber, which turns every driver into a potential cabbie. Stone charts the transformation of Silicon Valley since 2008, and he writes winningly of how people with good--commercially if not ethically--ideas can take them from inspiration to reality. In this aspect alone, the book makes highly useful reading for budding entrepreneurs, who should also take Stone's point that the winners in this Darwinian struggle were the players who studied the market exhaustively to figure out just the right angle of entry. Granted, in this anecdotally driven account, there is also plenty to pepper the ire of anyone who's not on board with the thought that a speculator, alive with realization of "lost utility," can build a robust economy on the backs of others alone. And, as the author notes, these new Silicon Valley firms seem to represent "the overweening hubris of the techno-elite" as much as they represent a disruption of the service sector. Despite patches of gee-whiz formulaic prose ("the Airbnb marketplace had the most incredible structural momentum that many of the company's investors and executives had ever seen"), Stone's account is illuminating reading for the business-minded. 384pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2017.
Library Journal | 02/15/2017
The sharing economy is pretty revolutionary, and Stone (senior executive of global technology, Bloomberg News; The Everything Store) tries to take its measure by examining the history of two companies: ride-sharing Uber and home-sharing Airbnb. The emphasis is very much upon the personalities and decisions of the founders and leaders. Stone's admiration for their accomplishments is evident, but he never falls into outright hero worship. He does not ignore or minimize their poor decisions, or the costs others have borne for the companies' success. This book does a good job of comparing the companies' origins and behavior, finding both similarities and differences. In this regard, what is perhaps most striking is the self-glorification in which both indulge, and the often resulting lack of perspective. Stone's descriptions of competitors and also government officials who seek to regulate the companies are similar to those of the main protagonists, though naturally less extensive. VERDICT Drawing upon publicly available materials as well as interviews conducted by the author, this very readable, informative history will likely appeal to those interested in the sharing economy and contemporary business history. [See Prepub Alert, 9/12/16.]. Shmuel Ben-Gad, Gelman Lib., George Washington Univ., Washington, DC. 384p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2017.
Library Journal Prepub Alert | 09/12/2016
After the Wall Street crash of 2008, Silicon Valley needed a major retuning-and a fresh batch of revolutionaries to do the job. Stone chronicles the new breed, among them Travis Kalanick of Uber and Brian Chesky of Airbnb, to see how they are changing the face of business. Following Stone's New York Times best-selling The Everything Store, winner of a Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award; with a 100,000-copy first printing. Barbara Hoffert. 384p. LJ Prepub Alert Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2016.
Publishers Weekly | 01/16/2017
Stone (The Everything Store) turns his attention to the sharing economy in this dual portrait of two of the fastest growing startups in the "post-Google, post-Facebook era of innovation" in Silicon Valley. At both Uber, the ride-sharing app, and Airbnb, the homestay rental platform, Stone finds commonality among the CEOs, who lead their respective companies with an idealistic vision and aggressive business practices. Uber's Travis Kalanick comes off as the more pugnacious of the two, while Brian Chesky of Airbnb operates with a softer touch. Beginning in 2009 with President Obama's inauguration, the book follows the companies and their founders from the early days to their current status as leaders in the global market place, upending their respective industries and local economies around the world. Both Uber and Airbnb are currently valued in billions, but as Stone shows, the road to success over the past 8 years has not been an easy one. Both companies persevered through financial woes caused by investor rejections, struggles with local governments, scuffles with rivals, and publicity disasters. The writing is solid and the sheer magnitude of the book's subjects demands attention for this book. (Jan.). 384p. Web-Exclusive Review. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2017.
9780316388399,dl.it[0].title
Review Citations
New York Times Book Review | 06/25/2017