![]() |
|
|
|
"We're reasonably candid and low-key and, all the same, ruthless" ›BEST-KNOWN VENTURE: John Brockman Associates JOHN BROCKMAN ASSOCIATES INC.: The literary agent who put a floppy disk on his logo and panicked staid old Publisher's Row into a buying frenzy. I'm not in business to help people. I'm not in business to make friends. I'm in business to make money." The persona John Brockman likes to present to the press (and the press has been very much interested in him lately) is one of relentless cynicism. "I'm not in love with personal computers; I'm not in love with software: It's a business. We're doing it to make money, and we're making a fortune. When you have an opportunity like this you go flat out. Anyone who doesn't is an idiot." Brockman earned his place in this book when he went flat out to create a new market—by selling the staid, New York publishers on computer books and software before they even knew what a floppy disk was. As the world's first software agent By July 1984, John Brockman was making more money each month than he did in his entire first seven years as a literary agent. So why do we have so much difficulty taking Brockman at face value—isn't he just another entrepreneur out to make as much money as possible? His previous personae have a lot to do with it. He was a first-rate literary agent, an avant-garde philosopher, a producer of multimedia performances, a promoter of experimental films. |