
Rule Breaker Investing Earning Attention with Seth Godin
May 21, 2025
Seth Godin, internet entrepreneur and bestselling author known for Purple Cow and Tribes, offers sharp takes on AI, marketing, and creativity. He explores how AI shifts from solo tools to networked communities. He contrasts earning attention with grabbing it and explains what a brand truly is. He outlines elegant strategy and why creativity will matter more as technology evolves.
01:01:55
Be Consistent Not 'Authentic' With Customers
- Prioritize consistency over 'authenticity' when serving strangers; be the dependable best version of your product or performance.
- Seth compares Taylor Swift faking performance when sick to professionals delivering consistent promises to customers.
Test Permission By Asking If You'd Be Missed
- Ask whether people would miss you if you stopped showing up to determine if you have permission marketing.
- Seth defines permission as earned attention, not legal fine print, and says if answer is no, you're a spammer.
Purple Cow Spread Through Status Signaling
- Purple Cow spread because people put the book on their desks to signal status, not because of stunts.
- Seth self-published 10,000 gimmick copies and organic word-of-mouth from workplace signaling drove millions in sales.
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Intro
00:00 • 1min
How AI Fits into a Long View of Technology
01:23 • 6min
From Solo AI Tools to Networked Communities
07:03 • 51sec
Professionals, Amateurs, and the AI Disruption
07:55 • 2min
What a Brand Really Is
09:41 • 3min
Authenticity vs. Consistency in Branding
13:08 • 3min
Permission Marketing and Earning Consent
16:00 • 4min
The Decline of Permission and the Open Web
19:52 • 3min
Brevity, Purpose, and When Short Form Works
22:55 • 5min
Earning Attention Through Remarkability
28:23 • 3min
Cheating by Building Unfair Advantages
30:58 • 4min
Elegant Strategy: The Compass That Guides Companies
35:23 • 3min
Will Technology End Full-Time Work?
38:44 • 6min
Creativity's Rising Importance with AI
44:29 • 4min
This Is Strategy — Strategy Versus Tactics
48:22 • 4min
Identifying Companies with Clear Strategies
52:00 • 1min
Buy, Sell, Hold Rapid-Fire Insights
53:25 • 9min
Avoiding the Lizard Brain: Decision Guidance
01:02:40 • 1min
Outro
01:03:46 • 15sec

#16907
• Mentioned in 3 episodes
Free Prize Inside


Seth Godin
Seth Godin's "Free Prize Inside" explores the power of creating unexpected and delightful experiences for customers.
The book argues that in a world saturated with advertising, businesses need to find new ways to connect with their audience and build lasting relationships.
Godin emphasizes the importance of providing value beyond the product or service itself, creating moments of surprise and delight that leave a lasting impression.
He encourages businesses to think creatively about how they can engage their customers and build a loyal following.
The book is a practical and insightful guide for anyone looking to create a more engaging and memorable customer experience.

#314
• Mentioned in 85 episodes
The Dip
A Little Book That Teaches You When to Quit (and When to Stick)


Seth Godin
In 'The Dip,' Seth Godin challenges traditional views on persistence and quitting.
He introduces the concept of 'The Dip,' a challenging phase between starting and mastering a skill, which is necessary for growth and mastery.
Godin distinguishes 'The Dip' from 'The Cul-de-Sac' (a dead-end situation) and 'The Cliff' (a risky situation), advising readers to quit the latter two but push through 'The Dip' to achieve significant rewards.
The book provides practical advice on recognizing when to quit and when to stick with a project, job, or relationship, emphasizing that strategic quitting can lead to extraordinary success.

#30
• Mentioned in 317 episodes
The War of Art
Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles


Steven Pressfield
In 'The War of Art', Steven Pressfield identifies the internal force of 'Resistance' that hinders creative endeavors.
The book is divided into three sections: 'Resistance: Defining the Enemy', 'Combating Resistance: Turning Pro', and a final section that discusses the role of the muses and the battle between the Self and the Ego. Pressfield provides practical advice on recognizing and overcoming resistance, emphasizing the importance of professionalism, discipline, and continuous work in achieving creative success.

#480
• Mentioned in 63 episodes
This Is Strategy
Make Better Plans


Seth Godin
In this book, Seth Godin provides a framework for effective and elegant strategic thinking.
He challenges readers to identify their 'smallest viable audience' and make remarkable work, understand and influence the systems shaping our world, prioritize long-term thinking over instant gratification, and make smart, purposeful choices that shape a better tomorrow.
The book is designed for leaders, entrepreneurs, and change-makers seeking lasting transformation in their careers and communities.

#124
• Mentioned in 154 episodes
Thinking in bets
Making Smarter Decisions When You Don't Have All the Facts


Annie Duke
In this book, Annie Duke teaches readers how to make better decisions by treating them as 'bets' on uncertain outcomes.
She emphasizes the importance of distinguishing between the quality of a decision and its outcome, acknowledging the role of luck, and avoiding biases such as 'resulting' and hindsight bias.
Duke draws on her experiences as a professional poker player and combines these with insights from cognitive psychology and other fields to provide tools for making more objective and thoughtful decisions.
The book encourages readers to get comfortable with uncertainty, seek truth through diverse opinions, and learn from outcomes to improve future decision-making.

#305
• Mentioned in 87 episodes
The diamond age
Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer


Neal Stephenson
The novel is set in a near-future world where nanotechnology has revolutionized society.
It follows Nell, a young girl from a poor background, who receives an interactive educational book called the 'Young Lady's Illustrated Primer'.
This book, designed by John Percival Hackworth, is intended to provide a personalized education and becomes a central element in Nell's life.
The story explores themes of education, social class, ethnicity, and the impact of technology on human society.
The novel is known for its complex narrative, intersecting storylines, and its depiction of a world deeply divided along political, ethnic, and cultural lines.

#194
• Mentioned in 117 episodes
Snow Crash


Neal Stephenson
Published in 1992, 'Snow Crash' is a science fiction novel by Neal Stephenson that delves into a future where the United States has fragmented into corporate city-states and the internet has evolved into a virtual reality called the Metaverse.
The story follows Hiro Protagonist, a pizza delivery driver and part-time hacker, and Y.T.
, a teenage skateboard courier, as they navigate a complex world threatened by a mysterious computer virus and a powerful drug known as Snow Crash.
The novel explores themes of history, linguistics, anthropology, and computer science, and is noted for its prescient vision of the metaverse and its influence on Silicon Valley innovators.

#286
• Mentioned in 89 episodes
Purple Cow
Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable


Seth Godin
In 'Purple Cow,' Seth Godin argues that traditional marketing strategies no longer work in today's saturated market.
He advocates for the creation of 'Purple Cows' – products or services that are so remarkable they naturally generate buzz and attract attention.
Godin uses the metaphor of a purple cow to illustrate how being ordinary is no longer sufficient; businesses must be bold, innovative, and willing to take risks to stand out.
The book is filled with examples from successful companies like Apple, Starbucks, and JetBlue, and it challenges readers to rethink their marketing strategies to focus on creating truly remarkable offerings.

#912
• Mentioned in 40 episodes
Linchpin
Are You Indispensable?


Seth Godin
In 'Linchpin: Are You Indispensable?
', Seth Godin argues that the modern workplace has evolved beyond the traditional roles of management and labor.
He introduces the concept of 'linchpins' – individuals who are indispensable to their organizations because they invent, lead, connect others, and create order out of chaos.
Godin emphasizes the importance of creativity, passion, and art in one's work, suggesting that these qualities make an individual irreplaceable.
The book encourages readers to stop being mere cogs in a machine and instead strive to become artists who bring unique value and meaning to their work and organizations.
AI, marketing, brand, creativity... just a few of the subjects that Seth Godin can talk about with eloquence and insight. This week the "Purple Cow" author is here with David and guest-host Andy Cross to shed light on what earns attention, transaction, and loyalty.
Hosts: David Gardner, Andy Cross
Guest: Seth Godin
Producer: Rick Engdahl
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