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All projects: Gel, Jobs, Gootodo, Games, Uncle Mark, Goovite, Blog, Bit Literacy

About Mark Hurst

Mark's new book, Bit Literacy, is now available at bitliteracy.com.

Mark Hurst

Widely credited for popularizing "customer experience" online, Mark Hurst has worked since the birth of the Web to make Internet technology easier to use. In 2002, Hurst was named "one of the 1,000 most creative individuals in the U.S." in Richard Saul Wurman's book 1,000. InfoWorld magazine named Hurst Netrepreneur of the Year in 1999.

When Mark Hurst founded Creative Good in 1997, it was the world's first user experience consulting firm. He runs Creative Good with Phil Terry in New York City.

Mark Hurst is also the founder and host of the Gel conference (Good Experience Live), which was first held on May 2, 2003 in New York City. Gel 2007 will be held on Thursday and Friday, April 19-20, 2007 in New York City.

Hurst's Good Experience newsletter, via Web, RSS, and e-mail, has tens of thousands of subscribers worldwide.

Bit Literacy, Hurst's 2007 book in managing information overload, has thousands of copies in print and has "changed the lives" of readers, according to their feedback. (See reader comments.)

Previously, Hurst was director of product development at Yoyodyne, an early Internet marketing firm founded by Seth Godin and later bought by Yahoo. Hurst began his Internet career as a graduate researcher at the MIT Media Lab. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees in computer science from MIT.

Contact Mark Hurst: mark@goodexperience.com

And read Bit Literacy!




All Projects from Good Experience

Gel Conference
Our annual get-together in New York
Jobs Board
Post or find a job
Gootodo
The world's best todo list
Good Experience Games
The best games online
Uncle Mark Gift Guide
The 2008 guide to technology and life
Goovite
Easy event invites
Good Experience Blog & Newsletter
Mark Hurst explores good experience

"...the Elements of Style for the digital age."
- Seth Godin
Bit Literacy, the book by Mark Hurst, shows how to solve email and info overload.