Dot.Bomb: The Strange Death of Dot.Com Britain

by Rory Cellan-Jones

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When Britain got dot.com fever at the very end of the 20th century the City tore up the rule book. Lastminute.com soared to a stock-market valuation of 3750 million. Clickmango.com raised millions in days. Boo.com spent #100 million trying to sell designer sports gear on the Net. Old-style industrial giants with huge turnovers and workforces were edged out of the FTSE 100 by e-commerce newcomers losing a fortune. And then it all went horribly wrong, and even the most glamorous start-ups found they couldn't defy the laws of gravity. Rory Cellan-Jones was the BBC's Internet Correspondent throughout the whole dot.com bubble (now it no longer has a dedicated Internet Correspondent at all), and was thus uniquely placed to cover the whole story at first-hand, from the first fledgling net pioneers and the launch of Freeserve through the fabulous fin-de-siecle spending of boo.com to the horribly messy crash that with hindsight seemed utterly inevitable. Originally published as current affairs, "Dot.bomb" - with the story brough up to date for this 2003 edition - now stands as both a business manual of how not to start a business, and a work of recent history.
  • ISBN10 1854109529
  • ISBN13 9781854109521
  • Publish Date 21 August 2003 (first published 1 September 2001)
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 27 September 2005
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Aurum Press
  • Edition 2nd Revised edition
  • Format Paperback (B-Format (198x129 mm))
  • Pages 256
  • Language English