
I wanted to share a great piece of advice from our favorite marketing guru, Seth Godin, on being "remarkable".
If you're a business professional or entrepreneur, ask yourself: What are you doing today to make your endeavor "remarkable"? Or are you too busy with the problems, phone calls, crisis du jour, etc. to spend time developing what could be remarkable about your enterprise?
Or, if you're a sales professional, ask yourself: What am I doing today to set myself apart from my competition, and other sales professionals in my company? Or are you too worried about paperwork, quotas, etc.?
If you need help getting started on developing your "remarkableness", here's a list from our friend Seth:
1. Understand the urgency of the situation. Half-measures simply won't do. The only way to grow is to abandon your strategy of doing what you did yesterday, but better. Commit.
2. Remarkable doesn't mean remarkable to you. It means remarkable to me. Am I going to make a remark about it? If not, then you're average, and average is for losers.
3. Being noticed is not the same as being remarkable. Running down the street naked will get you noticed, but it won't accomplish much. It's easy to pull off a stunt, but not useful.
4. Extremism in the pursuit of remarkability is no sin. In fact, it's practically a requirement. People in first place, those considered the best in the world, these are the folks that get what they want. Rock stars have groupies because they're stars, not because they're good looking.
5. Remarkability lies in the edges. The biggest, fastest, slowest, richest, easiest, most difficult. It doesn't always matter which edge, more that you're at (or beyond) the edge.
6. Not everyone appreciates your efforts to be remarkable. In fact, most people don't. So what? Most people are ostriches, heads in the sand, unable to help you anyway. Your goal isn't to please everyone. Your goal is to please those that actually speak up, spread the word, buy new things, or hire the talented.
7. If it's in a manual, if it's the accepted wisdom, if you can find it in a "Dummies" book, then guess what? It's boring, not remarkable. Part of what it takes to do something remarkable is to do something first and best. Roger Bannister was remarkable. The next guy, the guy who broke Bannister's record wasn't. He was just faster ... but it doesn't matter.
8. It's not really as frightening as it seems. They keep the masses in line by threatening them (us) with all manner of horrible outcomes if we dare to step out of line. But who loses their jobs at the mass layoffs? Who has trouble finding a new gig? Not the remarkable minority, that's for sure.
9. If you put it on a T-shirt, would people wear it? No use being remarkable at something that people don't care about. Not ALL people, mind you, just a few. A few people insanely focused on what you do is far far better than thousands of people who might be mildly interested, right?
10. What's fashionable soon becomes unfashionable. While you might be remarkable for a time, if you don't reinvest and reinvent, you won't be for long. Instead of resting on your laurels, you must commit to being remarkable again quite soon.



7. If it's in a manual, if it's the accepted wisdom, if you can find it in a "Dummies" book, then guess what? It's boring, not remarkable. Part of what it takes to do something remarkable is to do something first and best. Roger Bannister was remarkable. The next guy, the guy who broke Bannister's record wasn't. He was just faster ... but it doesn't matter.





» Being Remarkable and Cannibalism from InsureMe Agent Blog
Last week, Landing The Deal gave a nice recap of an old Seth Godin post on being remarkable in sales. In a list of 10 tips for setting yourself apart from other agents in your insurance sales space, this... [Read More]
Tracked on: February 21, 2007 3:14 PM | Permalink to Trackback