PORTFOLIO / PENGUIN
Contents
ALSO BY SETH GODIN
The Icarus Deception
V Is for Vulnerable
Linchpin
Tribes
Meatball Sundae
All Marketers Are Liars
The Dip
Free Prize Inside
Purple Cow
Survival Is Not Enough
Unleashing the Ideavirus
Permission Marketing
Big Red Fez
The Big Moo (editor)
Small Is the New Big
Poke the Box
We Are All Weird
Find them all at sethgodin.com
For Helene, always
Thanks to Bernadette Jiwa and Niki Papadopoulos for the herculean task of culling six years worth of writing into this book. I couldnt (and wouldnt) have done it without you.
I dont remember writing most of these posts.
I read them and I shake my head in agreement (most of the time). Sometimes I wonder what I was thinking at the time. But yes, I wrote them, every word, over the course of the last five or six years.
Ive collected them in this handy set not because you can read them more easily during takeoff or landing, or in the tub or at the beach. No, Ive collected them because theres (still) something magical about the linear, permanent nature of a book. Even an ebook feels less evanescent than the disconnected, temporary nature of a blog post.
One of my creative heroes, Gary Larson, was generous enough to let us read the collected Far Side, thousands of brilliant little cartoons connected into permanent volumes. And the experience of reading them is different than the way he intended when he drew them. A cartoon or a blog post emailed to you now and then might break your stride or make you do a double take, but the relentless force of an entire book of them can have a genuine impact on you and those that you care to share with.
I guess that this is the real reason I collected these posts. So those that have been keeping up with the daily blog have a handy tool they can use to proselytize. Hand this to the heathen, see if you can get them to join the tribe.
Thanks for reading. Thanks for sharing. And most of all, thanks for doing difficult work.
Whatcha Gonna Do with That Duck?
Were surrounded by people who are busy getting their ducks in a row, waiting for just the right moment.
Getting your ducks in a row is a fine thing to do. But deciding what you are going to do with that duck is a far more important issue.
Introduction: May 2004
Five Years from Now
Assume that:
Hard drive space is free.
Wifi-like connections are everywhere.
Connections speeds are 10 to 100 times faster.
Everyone has a digital camera.
Everyone carries a device that is sort of like a laptop, but cheap and tiny.
The number of new products introduced every day is five times greater than now.
Walmarts sales are three times as big as they are now.
Any manufactured product thats more than five years old in design sells at commodity pricing.
The retirement age will be five years higher than it is now.
Your current profession will either be gone or be totally different.
What then?
Now was Always a Good Time to Start
Opportunity. Choosing and Doing. Picking Yourself.
Make Something Happen
If I had to pick one piece of marketing advice to give you, that would be it.
Now.
Make something happen today, before you go home, before the end of the week. Launch that idea, post that post, run that ad, call that customer. Go to the edge, that edge youve been holding back from and do it today. Without waiting for the committee or your boss or the market. Just go.
When to Start
- The best time to start is when youve got enough money in the bank to support all contingencies.
- The best time to start is when the competition is far behind in technology, sophistication, and market acceptance.
- The best time to start is when the competition isnt too far behind, because then youll spend too long educating the market.
- The best time to start is when everything at home is stable and you can really focus.
- The best time to start is when youre out of debt.
- The best time to start is when no one is already working on your idea.
- The best time to start is when your patent comes through.
- The best time to start is after youve got all your VC funding.
- The best time to start is when the political environment is more friendly than it is now.
- The best time to start is after youve got your degree.
- The best time to start is after youve worked all the kinks out of your plan.
- The best time to start is when youre sure its going to work.
- The best time to start is after youve hired the key marketing person for the new division.
- The best time to start was last year. The best opportunities are already gone.
- The best time to start is before some pundit declares your segment pass. Too late.
- The best time to start is when the new generation of processors is shipping.
- The best time to start is when the geopolitical environment settles down.
Actually, as youve probably guessed, the best time to start was last year. The second best time to start is right now.
The Reason
The reason they teach biology before they teach chemistry in high school is that biology was invented first. Even though you need chemistry to do biology, but not vice versa.
The reason that you have a water bubbler in your office is that it used to be difficult to filter water effectively.
The reason that Blockbuster exists is that VCR tapes used to cost more than $100.
The reason that SUVs have a truck chassis is that the government regulates vehicles with a truck chassis differently.
The reason you have a front lawn is to demonstrate to your friends and neighbors how much time and energy youre prepared to waste.
The reason the typewriter keyboard is in a weird order is that original typewriters jammed, and they needed to rearrange the letters to keep common letters far apart.
The reason we dont have school in the summer is so our kids can help with farm work. Or because its too hot and theres no air conditioning
The reason theres a toll on that bridge but not on that road is that there used to be a ferry on that river, and the ferryman needed to make a living.
The reason you go to a building to go to work every day is that steam or water power used to turn a giant winch-like structure that went right through the factory building. Every workman used that power to do his work. As factories got more sophisticated, it remained efficient to move the workers, not the stuff.
Whats your reason?
Is There a First-Mover Advantage?
Some conventional wisdom says that you need to be first to win. People will point to eBay and Microsoft and Starbucks and the William Morris Agency and say, if its a natural monopoly or a market where switching costs are high, the first person in, wins.
This argument has been amplified lately by the high cost of building a name for yourself (it would just cost too much to build a brand bigger than Starbucks in a post-TV world) as well as the network effects of things like eBay and Hotmail.