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Share of Culture
Share of Culture
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€21.99
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A01=Paul Parton
Attention Economy
Author_Paul Parton
Books About Brand Trust and Engagement
Books About Marketing
Books on Modern Branding and Influence
Books That Decode Digital Influence
Brand Building
Category=KJE
Category=KJSA
Category=KJSC
Category=KJSP
Digital Media Marketing
Earned Media
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Essential Reads on the Attention Economy
Must-Read Books on Media Strategy
Reading the Pulse of Culture and Communication
Product details
- ISBN 9798895654330
- Weight: 249g
- Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
- Publication Date: 21 May 2026
- Publisher: Post Hill Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
How progressive marketers build brands in a post-advertising world.
The rules of marketing and brand building have fundamentally changed.
While traditional marketers compete for diminishing TV audiences, a new generation of brands have stopped trying to buy attention; instead, they earn it. They don’t interrupt culture—they become part of it.
The most successful brands today aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest marketing budgets. A multi-million-dollar ad campaign isn’t worth what it once was, and progressive marketers know that and have adopted different strategies. The brands that dominate aren’t just seen—they’re discussed. This isn’t just changing how brands communicate—it’s transforming the very nature of how they’re built and what plants them into the public consciousness.
Tesla built a billion-dollar business without a dollar of traditional advertising. Glossier transformed beauty by engaging communities rather than preaching to them. K-Pop band BTS generated billions of dollars in sales by using social media to build an army of fans.
What unites these successes is a shift from competing for share of market to competing for share of culture.
Share of Culture reveals the principles behind their success: How they connect with their audience and get them talking. Drawing on marketing science and real-world case studies, renowned brand strategist Paul Parton outlines a practical model for building brands in the new attention economy where a surplus of goods is mirrored by a deficit of attention, and where conversation is currency.
The rules of marketing and brand building have fundamentally changed.
While traditional marketers compete for diminishing TV audiences, a new generation of brands have stopped trying to buy attention; instead, they earn it. They don’t interrupt culture—they become part of it.
The most successful brands today aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest marketing budgets. A multi-million-dollar ad campaign isn’t worth what it once was, and progressive marketers know that and have adopted different strategies. The brands that dominate aren’t just seen—they’re discussed. This isn’t just changing how brands communicate—it’s transforming the very nature of how they’re built and what plants them into the public consciousness.
Tesla built a billion-dollar business without a dollar of traditional advertising. Glossier transformed beauty by engaging communities rather than preaching to them. K-Pop band BTS generated billions of dollars in sales by using social media to build an army of fans.
What unites these successes is a shift from competing for share of market to competing for share of culture.
Share of Culture reveals the principles behind their success: How they connect with their audience and get them talking. Drawing on marketing science and real-world case studies, renowned brand strategist Paul Parton outlines a practical model for building brands in the new attention economy where a surplus of goods is mirrored by a deficit of attention, and where conversation is currency.
Paul Parton is an internationally renowned brand strategist whose career has spanned three decades and three continents. He currently serves as Group Chief Strategy Officer for the PR firm Golin. Since joining the agency in 2019, the agency was named PRWeek’s large agency of the year three times, and global agency of the year twice.
Prior to Golin, Paul founded The Brooklyn Brothers creative agency in 2005, and worked for international advertising agency DDB as Executive Director of Brand Planning in their New York office. He began his career as a graduate trainee with Ogilvy and Mather in London, and holds an MBA with distinction in strategic marketing.
Prior to Golin, Paul founded The Brooklyn Brothers creative agency in 2005, and worked for international advertising agency DDB as Executive Director of Brand Planning in their New York office. He began his career as a graduate trainee with Ogilvy and Mather in London, and holds an MBA with distinction in strategic marketing.
Share of Culture
€21.99
