Management Blog Carnival, Review 3 – Seth Godin blog


(Note: This blog is the last of three in a carnival organized by John Hunter.

I picked the Seth Godin blog to review because his name rang a bell, but I’d never read anything by him that I specifically recall.  As it turns out, I really did not see much that interested me greatly for exactly the opposite reason expressed in this comment by “ariana10” to Godin’s blog of 8/22 (bulleted below):

“I relate to this blog because I am a journalism major at the University of Kansas and I can’t do math for the life of me.”

I am an engineering major who likes math (in moderation!) and I can do it for the life of me.  However, I am also keen on marketing and business (MBA, U Minn., ’80) so, even though Godin is light on stats, I must admit that he’s got much to offer for those of us trying to make a living in this high-tech world.  Here are a few Seth Godin blogs of 2009 that hit my hot buttons.

  • 1/24 Good guys finish… Godin suggests that under the bright light of the internet being generous and fair in business dealings pays off now more than ever.  I like that idea a lot.

    “When your customer service policies delight rather than enrage, word of mouth more than pays your costs.”

  • 8/22 Not so good at math demonstrates the confusion creating by using miles per gallon (mpg) as the metric for fuel efficiency.  As I noted in my blog on how the Inverse transformation puts mileage comparisons on track / the best measure for fuel efficiency is gallons per ten-thousand miles.
  • 8/28 Spare no expense! does get somewhat quantitative (finally a graph!) in discussing the tradeoffs of giving almost no personal service to a huge number of users (Google) versus a great deal of attention to the troublesome individuals who soak it up.
  • 10/26 Dunbar’s Number isn’t just a number, it’s the law is where Godin, a people person, draws the line at 150 – the limit predicted by British anthropologist Robin Dunbar for stable social relationships.  I think the number might be a lot less (a tenth?) for engineers than marketers. ; )

What sets Seth Godin’s blog apart from the others I’ve seen (admittedly a small sample) is the amount of original content laced with thought-provoking observations of how people interact and what turns them on or off.  He’s a guy worth keeping an eye on, I think.

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