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Get the Free 20 questions to Ask Before Launching Your Idea workbook when you sign up for occasional updates.

The Most Important Question You’re Forgetting To Ask

From the outside looking in The Lego Group had a hugely successful business a decade ago. It was a beloved brand that seemed to be surviving the digital age. The balance sheet told a different story though and Lego had more years in the red than in the black between 1998 and 2004.

Part of their problem was doing too much. Lego had over diversified by moving into theme parks and clothing. And the once primary coloured bricks now came in a palette of 100 colors.

In 2005 Lego sold the Legoland theme parks and halved the number of colours of bricks they were making. They began asking their designers to innovate with constraints, but to leverage those to become even more creative. Lego returned to profitability that same year.

One of the first questions the new CEO Jorgen Vig Knudstorp asked was,

“What should we stop doing?”

The thing you take away leaves room for the things that really matter.

So, what should you stop doing?

Image by psychopyko.

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What’s The Point?


Business isn’t about transactions and giving people the thing they want. That box of chocolates, an upgraded phone or the business class flight.

And marketing isn’t about selling them your facts.

It’s about giving people a story to believe in and one that they want to tell. Just like Evan’s.
(Take the two minutes to watch the video below, it’s worth it!).

The point is to take your customers on a journey to where they want to go.
Even if that’s almost to the end of the world.

Image by Palo.

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The Second Secret Of Great Marketing

I signed up to an email list of a brilliant and famous author over a year ago and hadn’t hear anything since. No blog posts. No regular email. Nothing interesting or relevant to me. Nothing to look forward to. No connection to each other.

The author had my permission but it wasn’t much of a two way street. Two weeks out from the release of the next book I got an email offering me incentives to pre-order. I began to wonder if the author was excited about the impact the book might have on my life and work, or if I was just making up the numbers on the road to a New York Times Bestseller. I haven’t ordered the book yet.

So the third secret is….generosity first last and always.

If you can’t afford to be generous you can’t afford to be selfish either.

Image by acb.

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Tell The Story You Want To Tell

You are not the first person (or the last) to admit that you’ve ended up doing the wrong thing.
For the wrong people.
For the wrong reasons.
Something that didn’t bring you the joy you thought it would.

If you’ve ever wound up at the end of a path that you have chosen and wondered how the heck you got there… try this.

Start telling the story you want to tell, not the story you think you have to tell.

Image by dolahn.

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Three True Stories

To all of Arthur’s family,

We were so sorry that everything ended up so badly for you all last week.
It is so difficult when owners are prepared to do anything to cure their pet’s problem and it’s still not possible. Thank you for allowing us to try.
He was part of your lives for a short time but it’s amazing how quickly they become part of the family. You are sure to be missing him terribly, we can only hope that each day gets a little bit easier.

Regards
Damian, Paul, Joanna, Rob, Nicole, Jane, Jo, Kris, Amy and all at the vets.

____________________

To the Ryan family,

Just a short note to express our deepest sympathy over your loss of Wilbur. It takes a pretty amazing dog to make it to 19. I think his attitude and tenacity helped him to get there. We hope you have lots of happy memories of Wilbur, as part of your family he will be deeply missed.

Yours Sincerely
Kristen, Garry, Edgar and everyone at the vets.

_____________________

One of my dear friends was diagnosed with cancer last week. She had a five biopsies taken on Friday and was sent home to wait until Tuesday or Wednesday. Her husband and three sons held their breath for four days.

Tuesday came and went. Nobody called. It’s okay that they didn’t have the results. It’s not okay that they didn’t care enough to make time to call and say, “No news yet. Are you okay? Hang in there.”

Each of us has the opportunity to touch someone every single day. To really see people. To add meaning. To care. I’m not sure we do it often enough.

You might not be able to change the outcome, but you can change how people feel in a heartbeat.

Image by B.

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If You Build It Will They Come?

I spent most of yesterday at Startup Weekend and was excited to hear the feedback from the judges during the final pitches. There were elegant apps and well developed presentations. Some teams had a product ready to roll out this week and others had nothing more than a well validated idea about what was possible.

The team that won didn’t design the elegant app, they hadn’t even developed the product. They had spent their time proving that if they built it people would come. They tested the idea by asking people for money to solve their problem. And their proof— someone actually parted with cash on the spot for a product that didn’t exist (they did give it back).

My friend Mark did this with an email list of twenty friends and neighbours when he started out baking bread as a hobby one day a week.

You don’t have to guess what the market wants or build the product from start to done. You just have to prove that a handful of people will pay for it first.

The better question to ask might be.

If you show them will they pay you?

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Why You Don’t Want To Be The Impulse Buy

Have you ever watched people shopping at the airport? They amble distractedly fingering this, picking up that. Nine times out of ten they put things back. Sometimes the packaging, or maybe the boredom gets the better of them and the buy something they had no intention of buying.

It’s a win for the manufacturer of the laptop bag or souvenir chocolate maker in that moment. But not a sustainable strategy for growth.

And yet we often organise our marketing around the hope of being the impulse buy, with SEO and brochures, banner ads and special offers. Hoping.

A far better strategy is to build your brand around being chosen on purpose.
By creating the thing that people really wanted in the first place.

Image by Geir Halvorsen.

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Why Is Giving Easier Than Taking?

From my first day at school (the day after I turned four,I don’t think my mother could wait a minute longer), we were taught that giving was a great thing. It was a convent school and every day Sister Collette would come around with a box and collect our pennies for babies in Africa. They taught us to share, to wait in line, to put our fingers on our lips so we could listen, to take turns but never to take. And almost never to ask. More than once I watched a barely toilet trained four year old make a puddle on the floor for the want of asking.

I loved bringing in lilacs from the garden at home for May alters and twigs for nature tables. Christmas gifts for secret Santas and homemade cakes on birthdays. I got a great education in taking and a lousy one in receiving, the legacy of which lives on to this day (ask my poor darling husband who despairs about buying me gifts). Maybe the same is true for you too? That’s why I’m sharing Amanda Palmer’s TED Talk video with you again.

In an increasingly freelance world where there is no direct trade of a paycheck for hours clocked in we’ve got to get better at asking. I don’t mean selfishly spamming that high profile person in your industry and asking for a leg up. The key to the ‘art of asking’ as Amanda said (and so many people missed) is the art of building trust first. Being generous. Giving in order to receive.

My book ‘Make Your Idea Matter’ has been nominated in the Small Business Book Awards alongside great books in the startup category. If you read it and got something from it I hope you’ll consider voting for it in one click.

Thanks for making it easier to ask.

UPDATE: Thanks to those who have emailed to say the link is not working in the blog post email.I’ve tripled checked it and it’s been working here all along so i have no idea why that is. I appreciate you tracking the right page down and voting anyway.

Image by Judd Hall.

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The First Secret To Great Marketing

The first secret to great marketing is knowing where to start.

“Marketers have to move upstream now. We have to stop being the last step in the process and start being the first step.”
—SETH GODIN

Most marketers start by thinking about what they want their customers to do.
“Buy now”, “click this”, “give us your email address” and “while you’re at it like us on Facebook”.

You however begin with an understanding of what your customer believes and how she wants to feel. Then you work your socks off to help her to get where she wants to go.

Image by Matthew Spencer.

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One Trick Pony

In the 1800’s small travelling circuses without big headline acts or a menagerie of exotic animals were known as dog and pony shows. The very average acts on the programme were derided as ‘one trick ponies’.

When I was growing up conventional wisdom said that you must strive never to be a ‘one trick pony’. That person who had a single talent, one area of expertise, no other way to stand out.

And yet what was once seen as a disadvantage would today be seen as mastery. You can’t help noticing that the unconventional and unwise, who have just one way of standing out and succeeding, inevitably do.

Image by badjonni.

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