We Are the Message: Rethinking Visibility, Marketing, and Power in the Digital Age

Normaler Preis
$21.95
Sonderpreis
$21.95
Normaler Preis
$21.95
Ausverkauft
Einzelpreis
pro 

Author/Contributor(s): Katz, Tristan
Publisher: North Atlantic Books
Date: 3/23/2027
Binding: Paperback
Condition: NEW
Are we building platforms to reinforce the world we live in...or imagine the world we want?

A frame-changing book about marketing, digital strategy, power, and culture-making: How to disrupt the dominant narratives that equate visibility with value, urgency with relevance, and content with worth


We Are the Message is a transformative guide that evolves visibility, marketing, and digital presence as conscious acts of cultural influence—not just neutral tools. Tristan Katz moves beyond conventional business advice and overplayed marketing hacks to explore how dominant systems like capitalism, white supremacy, and patriarchy shape what we see, what we value, and whom we reward online.

Informed by sociopolitical analysis, digital branding expertise, and embodied reflection, Katz invites us to rethink our relationship to power, privilege, and participation in digital culture. Katz shows how social platforms are active environments—not neutral spaces—that reinforce urgency, performance, conformity, and nervous system activation by design. You’ll learn how to:

  • Move from passive participation to intentional stewardship in digital spaces
  • Understand the role of boundaries, lineage, and collective influence
  • Do accountability as relational repair—not punishment
  • Disentangle the myths of meritocracy and neutrality online
  • Step into sustainable, role-based approaches to social change

Katz emphasizes that our intentions—in our social presences, branding, and digital marketing—are insufficient: to meet this moment and the needs of our communities, impact, accountability, and relational awareness must steer how we show up. Rather than striving for perfection and growth at all costs, We Are the Message shows how our digital selves can drive social change—often imperfectly, sometimes messily, but always rooted in curiosity and collective care.