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Seth Godin’s Roadtrip visit to Boston

Seth Godin: Thoughts on the media revolution, entrepreneurship, education − Boston edition

By Alexandra Smith of Designated Editor

The Revolution: It’s the biggest of our time, the biggest since Henry Ford

  • We used to work toward and with a tangible product that wore out eventually – not anymore.
  • What you do all day at work is being constantly shaped by the revolution.
  • It will never go back to the way it was.
  • What are you doing during the revolution?

Entrepreneurship

  • There’s a shift in what it means “to work” in the world we live in now.
  • Doing work that provides a gift changes you, similar to service work.
  • A steady job with a predictable income is old school.
  • What makes something remarkable is people wanting to make remarks about it – This is why people talk about advertisements, because they are funny, not because they’re all that great.

Education

  • School simply teaches us to be good at school and to do what we’re told.
  • Problem-solving is missing from traditional education.
  • We need people who don’t just simply listen to and document a problem, but those who can solve it when it is presented – this is what we do in business.
  • We aren’t trained to be the best at one thing – we are trained to be competent at many things.

Godin’s advice for adapting

  • Don’t listen to your lizard brain. (Godin used a lizard prop to represent the part of our brain that controls our fear of taking  leaps, which drives us to do things that are safe and protected).
  • Very few people can accomplish creative work while their lizard brain is freaking out.
  • The cost of failing has never been lower.
  • You know it’s your lizard brain talking if it’s like fearing your will plane crash – it’s irrational.

Godin on spam

  • Don’t spam people to get your ideas out.
  • Earn the right to be an expert.
  • Spam doesn’t work as well as it used to.
  • Talk to those who want to be talked to with relevant messages.
  • Earn the right / gain enough knowledge to get in to talk to people in your niche about your ideas.

Godin on your work

  • Your job should be to come as close as possible to being fired every day.
  • If they don’t embrace your new ideas, leave.
  • Who would miss you if you left?
  • If you’re a go-getter, team up with a visionary, or vice versa.
  • “My boss won’t let me” is bogus. You’re not asking the right way.

Resources

More Seth Godin wisdom

Learn more about the Boston Linchpins

About Suzanne McDonald

Former Boston Globe journalist, New Media Education Expert, founder of Designated Editor: Teaching individuals, educators & companies how to create influential interactions & eliminate social media insanity.

Comments

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  2. [New Post] Seth Godin’s Roadtrip visit to Boston – via #twitoaster http://blog.designatededitor.com/2010/08

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