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Book Review: Purple Cow

September 20th, 2007 · 1 Comment

Purple Cow is a remarkable little book about the current state of marketing. Seth Godin makes the convincing case that selling ordinary products using traditional advertising no longer works.

Ordinary products are easy to make these days, most of us have everything we need, and we’re pretty satisfied with it. No amount of money spent on ads is going to make us change our mind. If customers don’t have the problem you’re trying to solve, they will not even listen. You are invisible.

Instead, Godin argues, smart companies now spend their money in product design, so that they can come up with remarkable products (purple cows) that influential early adopters can then “sell” to other people through word of mouth. In Purple Cow products, the product and the message are one and the same: the product tells a story that people naturally want to share.

Recently, I was sitting next to a friend during lunch and, while we were waiting to be served he pulled out his new iPhone. I couldn’t help but to make a remark about how sleek it looked; he then answered by giving me a passionate demonstration of all of the phone’s features. If I were more of a gadget-head, I would have left the restaurant and go buy one immediately. This is a perfect example of a Purple Cow at work.

How does one make a Purple Cow? Seth doesn’t have the answer, but offers a good suggestion: look for the edges, explore the limits. Find a product that is “too” something for most people, but absolutely irresistible for a small (but big enough to be profitable) group of people, who will in turn evangelize your product to others.

As usual, Seth uses plenty of compelling case studies to make his points, and writes down his takeaways at the end of each chapter, which makes the concepts covered in the book easier to digest. At 160 small-format pages, the book is a quick and entertaining read, ideal for when you have a couple of hours to kill on a plane or airport.

Read More:

Fast Company article about the Purple Cow
Dosh Dosh Purple Cow Review

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Tags: Book Reviews · Branding

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Book Review: Meatball Sundae // Feb 19, 2008 at 10:32 pm

    […] Meatball Sundae, the author draws heavily from three of his previous books: Permission Marketing, Purple Cow and All Marketers are Liars, and successfully explains how the concepts covered in those books are […]

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