Sometimes you buy the book on Amazon (Kindle) but want to read it on a non-Kindle device. Here is the legal, ethical way to get the EPUB:
Note: Removing DRM for personal archiving is a legal gray area in some countries. Always check your local laws.
Before we discuss the EPUB format, let’s look at the unique value of the sequel:
While reading the chapter on "Emerging Markets," open a spreadsheet. The EPUB will provide formulas for calculating market penetration in chaotic retail environments. Input your own data side-by-side with the book's examples. how brands grow part 2 epub
The best way to get a safe, high-quality How Brands Grow Part 2 EPUB is to purchase it from major digital retailers. Here is where the official file is available:
Price range: Expect to pay between $25–$45 USD for the digital edition, which is standard for Oxford University Press academic titles.
Perhaps the most valuable aspect of Part 2 is its rejection of academic abstraction. It is written for the brand manager staring at a budget spreadsheet. Sometimes you buy the book on Amazon (Kindle)
How Brands Grow: Part 2 (subtitled Emerging Markets, Services, Durables, New Brands and Category Buyers) is the 2015 follow-up to Byron Sharp’s groundbreaking 2010 book, How Brands Grow. While the first book focused on fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) in developed markets, Part 2 expands the evidence-based "Sharpian" laws of marketing to new contexts.
If you buy the Kindle version (usually $29.99), you can legally convert it to EPUB using open-source software like Calibre (with the DeDRM plugin for personal use only). This is the most common route for "EPUB seekers" because Kindle formatting is robust.
Despite high demand, there is no legal, commercial EPUB version of How Brands Grow: Part 2 (or Part 1) sold by the publisher, Oxford University Press (OUP). OUP typically releases academic and trade books in hardcover, paperback, and often Kindle (AZW3/KFX) formats, but not EPUB—likely due to licensing agreements with Amazon or historical DRM policies. Note: Removing DRM for personal archiving is a
What you will find legally:
What you might find illegally:
Pirated EPUBs from third-party sites. These are often poorly formatted (missing tables, charts, page numbers), may contain malware, and deprive the authors of royalties. The authors (Romaniuk & Sharp) are empirical researchers who rely on book sales to fund further work—so piracy hurts the field.
Want to receive push notifications for all major on-site activities?