Seth Godin's Blog
December 5, 2009
Do you really expect that the first time we transact, it will involve me giving you money in exchange for a product or service?
Perhaps this is a good strategy for a pretzel vendor on the street, but is that the best you can hope for?
Digital transactions are essentially free for you to provide. I can give you permission to teach me something. I can watch a video. I can engage in a conversation. We can connect, transfer knowledge, engage in a way that builds trust... all of these things make...
December 4, 2009
You never cease to amaze me.
Just 48 hours after launching a review copy fundraiser for Acumen Fund, we have crossed the goal of raising $100,000.
People gave far more than the minimum, which delighted but didn't surprise me.
I'm going to keep the page up until 2 pm ET today for latecomers, and then it's gone for good.
Thanks to everyone who participated. I'll email you in early January when the books ship. Thank you for everything.
Often, someone will riff on a concept or approach that characterizes the revolution that we're living through online, and heads will nod. "Sure, that sounds great [insert idea here... like Free, or social media or permission or ideaviruses or empowered consumers or treating people with respect, etc.:] within reason."
It's the last two words that make it a lie.
The last two words allow you to weasel your way into failure. Within reason means, "without bothering the boss, without taking a big...
December 3, 2009
What if your organization or your client has done nothing?
What if they've just watched the last fourteen years go by? No real website, no social media, no permission assets. What if now they're ready and they ask your advice? And, by the way, they have no real cash to spend...
Here's a list of my top ten things to consider doing:
Use gmail to give every person in the organization that can read English an email address. Use a free website creating tool or even Squidoo to build a page about...December 2, 2009
There used to be one hundred people who mattered.
That's true in a lot of industries, but particularly in books.
One hundred people who could make a book a hit. These were key buyers at bookstores, reviewers and editors at newspapers, the person who booked time at Oprah or the Today Show.
So publishers courted these people. If the one hundred loved it, the book launched as a hit. Of course the 100 all get free copies. Lots of free copies.
Today, of course, those one hundred people matter a lot...
As a client, your job isn't to be innovative. Your job is to foster innovation. Big difference.
Fostering innovation is a discipline, a profession in fact. It involves making difficult choices and causing important things to get shipped out the door. Here are a few thoughts to get you started.
Before engaging with the innovator, foster discipline among yourself and your team. Be honest about what success looks like and what your resources actually are. If you can't write down clear ground...December 1, 2009
You should be careful about headlines.
It's pretty easy to write a headline that will get someone to forgive your spam, and perhaps even to open your note (CyberMonday! 85% off...). It's pretty easy to write a headline that will get someone to click through on their RSS reader. It's even easy to write a tweet that will get a click through.
But is it better to get a click and then annoy someone, or better to only reach the people who care?
The mindset of the brazen copywriter is, "well, even if o...
November 30, 2009
"How much life insurance do you have?"
Zig Ziglar liked to say that with that one question, you could tell if someone was a successful life insurance agent. If they're not willing to buy it with their own money, how can they honestly persuade someone else to do so?
If you're in the music business but you never buy tickets or downloads, can you really empathize with the people you're selling to?
My favorite: if you work for a non-profit and you don't give money to charity, what exactly are you...
November 29, 2009
Wikipedia contains facts about facts. It's a collection of facts from other places.
Facebook doesn't have your friends. It has facts about your friends.
Google is at its best when it gives you links to links, not the information itself.
Over and over, the Internet is allowing new levels of abstraction. Information about information might be worth more than the information itself. Which posts should I read? Which elements of the project are at risk? Who is making the biggest difference to the...
November 28, 2009
Some artists continually seek to tear down boundaries, to find new powder, new territory, new worlds to explore. They're the ones that hop the fence to get to places no one has ever been.
Other artists understand that they need to see the edges of the box if they're going to create work that lasts. No fence, no art.
Can't do both at the same time.
My guess is that you're already one kind of person or the other. When people present you with an opportunity/problem, what's your first reaction...
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