Seth Godin's Blog, page 311

November 7, 2009

Take what you can get (?)

When you're just starting out or when your organization is struggling or when the economy isn't hot, it's very tempting to take what you can get.

You just graduated from law school and you have a lot of debt and the best job you can get is doing collections work. Should you take it?

Your consulting firm is organized around providing high-value work for large corporations, but the only gigs you can get in the consideration set for are small, struggling companies looking to spend a few hundred...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 07, 2009 03:34

November 6, 2009

Everyone is clueless

The problem with "everyone" is that in order to reach everyone or teach everyone or sell to everyone, you need to so water down what you've got you end up with almost nothing.

Everyone doesn't go to the chiropractor, everyone doesn't give to charity, everyone has never been to Starbucks. Everyone, in fact, lives a decade behind the times and needs hundreds of impressions and lots of direct experience before they realize something is going on.

You don't want everyone. You want the right...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 06, 2009 02:29

November 5, 2009

The unclicking 84%

Mark points us to this great set of stats.

Basically, all of the clicks for all the ads online come from only 16% of the surfers, and most of them come from just 4% of all internet users.

So, if you optimize your ads for clicks, it means you're ignoring a huge population.

If your business is built around the kind of person who clicks, you win. If it isn't, you either need to not buy ads online or buy ads optimized for attention and familiarity, not clicks.

Imagine that only left-handed people...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 05, 2009 02:36

November 4, 2009

When data and decisions collide

Until recently, most of the decisions we were called on to make were based on hunches, insight and a little bit of data. Occasionally, a field like direct marketing would develop into something quite data-driven ("I don't care if you like mailer one, Smythe, mailer #2 did three times, better! Number 2 it is.") but not often.

It took Ignaz Semmelweis more than twenty years (he died before it happened, actually) to persuade doctors that washing their hands could save the lives of mothers giving ...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 04, 2009 02:54

November 3, 2009

Limited edition boxed set available today SOLD OUT!

[We ended up selling more than three a minute. You guys are so cool. We had a few counter problems, but it didn't effect the number we sold...they're all gone, 800 in total, and I won't be able to sell any more. Thank you for the energy and support!:]

It seems as though the Apple tablet is unlikely to be ready in time for the holidays... what to get?



How about a boxed (a wooden box) set of five of my books? Very limited (only 800 will be sold, ever). Sold at a discount from retail, with...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 03, 2009 07:41

Limited edition boxed set available today

It seems as though the Apple tablet is unlikely to be ready in time for the holidays... what to get?



How about a boxed (a wooden box) set of five of my books? Very limited (only 800 will be sold, ever). Sold at a discount from retail, with cool packaging, assembled by elves, delivered by Martians, blessed by enlightened goats.





My goal was to make a rare item, even if it doesn't make any money. More and more, I'm thinking of books as artifacts and souvenirs, as convenient and...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 03, 2009 07:41

Ms. In-between

The either-or world continues to decay, confronted by a shifting economy and the tools of the net.

It used to be easy to tell if someone was a journalist. Either you were or your weren't. So giving special privileges to journalists was easy. Parking permits, press badges, first amendment protections... no problem, you're a journalist. Everyone else? No way.

It used to be easy to tell if someone was an entrepreneur. Either you had a full-time job or you ran a business. So we could treat...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 03, 2009 02:50

November 2, 2009

Help your customers avoid taking responsibility

It's interesting to see that people are much better at putting up with things that happen to them than they are at living with the consequences of a bad choice.

When you can blame someone else (or the gods of spite, chance and bad luck) it's emotionally safer than it is to acknowledge you made a lousy choice.

If the weather is freakishly bad on your vacation, you can embrace pity from your friends, and spend your angst cursing the storms.

On the other hand, if you book a trip in the middle of...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 02, 2009 02:52

November 1, 2009

Attention lust and Olympic craziness

For many organizations and individuals, attention is the most precious resource. The pursuit of attention for our ads, or our city or our careers dominates all else.

How else to explain the silly math that is used to justify Olympic hoopla? Can imagine how little patience people would have for the IOC and their internal politics if they didn't have a show that so many people wanted to watch?

Almost every city that has hosted an Olympics regrets it financially. The TV networks spend billions...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 01, 2009 02:22

October 31, 2009

Why celebrate Halloween?

Because everyone else does.

Why believe that people once put razor blades into apples and you should only eat wrapped candies? Because everyone else believes it (it's an urban legend).

Most of what we believe is not a result of direct experience (ever seen an electron?) but is rather part of our collection of truth because everyone (or at least the people we respect) around us seems to believe it as well.

We not only believe that some brands are better than others, we believe in social...

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 31, 2009 02:07

Seth Godin's Blog

Seth Godin
Seth Godin isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Seth Godin's blog with rss.