The Feed

Social ideas worth spreading. Curated by @michaelbatistic.

  • Home
  • About me
  • Are You Brainwashed: 7 ways to reinvent yourself. By Seth Godin

    • 7 Feb 2010
    • 0 Responses
    •  views
    • Reinvention Seth Godin
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost
    via slideshare.net

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

    • 2 Feb 2010
    • 0 Responses
    •  views
    • Blog Post Rules for ideas worth spreading Seth Godin
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost

    « 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.

    Save to del.icio.us • Digg This! (17 Diggs, 5 comments) • Email this • Subscribe to this feed • Share on Facebook

    Posted by Seth Godin on January 31, 2010 | Permalink

    TrackBack

    TrackBack URL for this entry:
    http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451b31569e20120a7e701d3970b

    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Random rules for ideas worth spreading:

    « Upcoming events | Blog Home | Modern procrastination »

    via sethgodin.typepad.com

    • Tweet
  • Seth Godin asks 70 big thinkers - What Matters Now? presentation

    • 15 Dec 2009
    • 0 Responses
    •  views
    • Seth Godin What happens now
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost
    via slideshare.net

    • Tweet
  • About

    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

    432434 Views
  • Archive

    • 2012 (102)
      • May (9)
      • April (6)
      • March (16)
      • January (38)
      • January (33)
    • 2011 (482)
      • November (25)
      • October (40)
      • September (30)
      • September (28)
      • July (34)
      • July (36)
      • June (52)
      • May (38)
      • March (32)
      • February (50)
      • February (56)
      • January (61)
    • 2010 (524)
      • December (33)
      • November (31)
      • October (37)
      • September (63)
      • August (58)
      • July (32)
      • June (33)
      • May (47)
      • April (56)
      • March (48)
      • February (59)
      • January (27)
    • 2009 (195)
      • December (22)
      • November (67)
      • October (94)
      • September (12)

    Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    TwitterLinkedInBuzzFlickrVimeoYoutubeDeliciousTumblr