
In "Vaporized," Robert Tercek reveals how digital dematerialization is transforming industries. Winner of the 2016 getAbstract International Book Award, this guide offers crucial strategies for thriving when everything physical becomes digital. What happens when your entire business model simply... evaporates?
Robert Tercek, award-winning author of Vaporized: Solid Strategies for Success in a Dematerialized World, is a globally recognized authority on digital innovation and the dematerialized economy. A seasoned media futurist, Tercek draws on three decades of executive leadership at MTV, Sony Pictures, and the Oprah Winfrey Network, where he pioneered groundbreaking digital services like the first mobile video streaming platforms and multiplayer web games.
His book—a 2016 Frankfurt Book Fair International Book of the Year—explores how physical products transform into digital services, leveraging insights from his advisory work with Fortune 500 companies including Google, Microsoft, and IBM.
Tercek hosts The Futurists podcast and serves as a strategic advisor to the Johnny Carson Center for Emerging Media Arts. Recognized as 2021 Humanitarian of the Year for his COVID SMART™ worker safety initiative, he regularly delivers keynotes at events like TEDx and the Sheffield Documentary Film Festival. Vaporized remains a seminal text in business strategy, cited by industry leaders navigating digital disruption.
Vaporized explores how digital technology is dismantling physical industries, transforming goods and services into intangible data. Robert Tercek analyzes the "vaporization" of media, retail, and entertainment, offering strategies to adapt to this software-driven economy. Key themes include dematerialization, platform dominance, and the rise of oligopolies like Apple and Amazon.
Business leaders, entrepreneurs, and professionals navigating digital disruption will find actionable insights. The book suits those in media, tech, or marketing seeking to understand platform economies, data monetization, and survival tactics in industries prone to vaporization.
Yes. Tercek’s analysis of digital transformation remains relevant amid AI advancements and decentralized work models. The book’s framework for identifying "vaporizable" industries helps readers anticipate tech-driven shifts in sectors like healthcare, education, and Web3 ecosystems.
Tercek describes economies where physical products (e.g., CDs, books) are replaced by digital equivalents (streaming, e-books). This dematerialization enables global scalability but erodes traditional revenue models, favoring agile startups over entrenched corporations.
The book highlights media (TV, publishing), retail (brick-and-mortar stores), and finance (cashless payments). Tercek also foresaw cloud computing’s impact on software distribution and the rise of gig economy platforms.
Tercek argues legacy industries fail by prioritizing physical scarcity over digital abundance. He cites Blockbuster’s collapse against Netflix and newspapers’ decline due to free online content as examples of resistance to vaporization.
These emphasize the inevitability of dematerialization and data-centric competition.
Unlike The Second Machine Age, Tercek focuses on business strategy over technical details. It complements Technosocialism by addressing digital economics but prioritizes corporate adaptation over societal policy.
Some argue Tercek underestimates regulatory pushback against tech monopolies. Critics also note the book’s 2015 examples (e.g., Netflix) now feel dated, though its core principles remain applicable.
Tercek’s framework explains AI’s data-hungry models and decentralized tech’s disruption of intermediaries. The book’s lessons help readers assess risks in tokenized assets, metaverse economies, and AI-driven automation.
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
Everyone is now in 'the information business' whether they realize it or not.
Vapor businesses are inherently unstable—information empires built on air require constant reinvention.
Money flows are the oxygen of digital ecosystems.
Cloud storage has emerged as a sticky subscription model.
Scomponi le idee chiave di Vaporized in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Distilla Vaporized in rapidi promemoria che evidenziano i principi chiave di franchezza, lavoro di squadra e resilienza creativa.

Vivi Vaporized attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli la voce e co-crea spunti che risuonino davvero con te.

Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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What do Tower Records, Flip cameras, Nokia phones, and taxi medallions have in common? They all seemed invincible-until they vanished. In 2006, Tower Records' flagship store on Sunset Boulevard didn't just close; it disappeared, taking with it an entire cultural ritual of browsing music alongside strangers. This wasn't a simple business failure. It was something more profound: vaporization. The shift from physical to digital doesn't just change how we buy music-it fundamentally rewrites the rules of value, ownership, and survival. Seth Godin warns that everyone is now "in the information business" whether they know it or not. The question isn't whether your industry will be vaporized, but when-and whether you'll see it coming.