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  • Seth's Blog: Random rules for ideas worth spreading

    • 2 Feb 2010
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    • Blog Post Rules for ideas worth spreading Seth Godin
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    « Upcoming events | Blog Home | Modern procrastination »

    Random rules for ideas worth spreading

    If you've got an idea worth spreading, I hope you'll consider this random assortment of rules. Like all rules, some are made to be broken, but still...

    • You can name your idea anything you like, but a google-friendly name is always better than one that isn't.
    • Don't plan on appearing on a reality show as the best way to launch your idea.
    • Waiting for inspiration is another way of saying that you're stalling. You don't wait for inspiration, you command it to appear.
    • Don't poll your friends. It's your art, not an election.
    • Never pay a non-lawyer who promises to get you a patent.
    • Avoid powerful people. Great ideas aren't anointed, they spread through a groundswell of support.
    • Spamming strangers doesn't work. Spamming friends doesn't work so well either, but it's certainly better than spamming strangers.
    • The hard part is finishing, so enjoy the starting part.
    • Powerful organizations adore the status quo, so expect no help from them if your idea challenges the very thing they adore.
    • Figure out how long your idea will take to spread, and multiply by 4.
    • Be prepared for the Dip.
    • Seek out apostles, not partners. People who benefit from spreading your idea, not people who need to own it.
    • Keep your overhead low and don't quit your day job until your idea can absorb your time.
    • Think big. Bigger than that.
    • Are you a serial idea-starting person? If so, what can you change to end that cycle? The goal is to be an idea-shipping person.
    • Try not to confuse confidence with delusion.
    • Prefer dry, useful but dull ideas to consumer-friendly 'I would buy that' sort of things. A lot less competition and a lot more upside in the long run.
    • Pick a budget. Pick a ship date. Honor both. Don't ignore either. No slippage, no overruns.
    • Surround yourself with encouraging voices and incisive critics. It's okay if they're not the same people. Ignore both camps on occasion.
    • Be grateful.
    • Rise up to the opportunity, and do the idea justice.

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    Posted by Seth Godin on January 31, 2010 | Permalink

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  • FeverBee: 8 Brilliant Posts About Online Communities

    • 19 Oct 2009
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    • Blog Post Online Communities
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    « People Want To Talk About Themselves | Main

    8 Brilliant Posts About Online Communities

    There are some blog posts that have radically influenced how we think of building online communities. Below are a few of the best of the past few years.

    1. Kevin Keller – 1000 True Fans. Your organization can serve small groups of people at high profit. This was the best blog post of last year and changed how we think about mass-marketing.
    2. Seth Godin – Tribe Management. The future of business is finding products for your community, not a community or your products. Why most businesses need a tribe manager.
    3. Jeremiah Owyang - Online Community Best Practices: Jeremiah with a comprehensive guide to developing an online community, complete with best practices at each stage.
    4. Jeremiah Owyang – Forrester Wave Report: Leaders in Community Platforms for Marketers: Jeremiah’s fantastic guide to the various community platforms. It’s available for free here.
    5. Jonathan Bishop – Increasing participation in online community: A framework for human-computer interaction. This is a slog to get through but invaluable reading for a scientific perspective on what people are likely to react to.
    6. Francois Goissieaux – Tribalization of Business Study: A watershed study about how business is changing towards communities.
    7. Chris Carlfi – A Pattern Language for Online (and Offline) Communities. A great overview of this little discussed area of community work. Familiarise yourself with the language of building communities.
    8. Chris Allen. Chris Allen is one of the few to actively tackle the Dunbar number and the 90-9-1 theory of participation in online communities. Read his series of posts for a clear understanding and the need for developing groups within your community. Part 1, part 2 and part 3.

    I wanted to include something by Guy Kawasaki and Clay Shirky in the group, but couldn’t find any single post that did their wisdom justice.  Drop me an e-mail if you know of a great posts.

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    Posted on Sunday, 18 October 2009 at 13:56 | Permalink

     

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    Strategist, innovationist, marketer and ideas junkie.

    Here's where I amplify the awesome.

    If you want to get in contact, email me at: michael.batistich@gmail.com

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