As Bob Dylan says: "The times, they are a Chaaaaangin' "

smastio

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
414
Location
St. Charles IL
Name
Steve Mastio
I find these types of brilliant thoughts all the time... this one I thought that I should share with the class. :) If you want to get them in the future, follow me on twitter - @fittlebug

Make sure you read the ENTIRE things to get the picture... then share your thoughts!
____________________________________________________

The extraordinary revolution of media choice

In the traditional model, you can only play one program at a time. One radio show or one movie or one show...

Scarcity of spectrum has changed just about every element of our culture. Scarcity of shelf space as well.

There are just a few radio stations in each market, and each station gets precisely one hour to broadcast each hour. Scarcity of spectrum, inflexible consumption (listen now or it's gone forever).

There are only a hundred or so channels on most cable systems. Each viewer is precious and you can only program one show at a time. So program for the largest audience you can find, because that's how you get paid. Share of viewership is everything.

There's only one shelf in front of that bookstore visitor at a time. That bit of shelf space is quite valuable... winner take all. Either the book is on that shelf or it's not.

And every trade show booth takes up a few hundred square feet. There can only be one booth in each location, so the trade show operator charges as much as she can for this particular spot. And having paid so much, the exhibitor tries to get people in and prevent them from leaving so soon. All of them.

BUT

And it's a big but...

In a world where everything is a click away, and in a world where everyone can have their own YouTube channel, ten blogs and a thousand email accounts... the only thing that's scarce is attention.

Shelf space is worthless now. Why worry about making a particular hour of radio all encompassing and wildly popular when you are welcome to broadcast a hundred hours--and people can listen whenever they like.

[Stop for a second and think about the fact that there is no real gatekeeper, no scarce shelf space, no superpowerful owner of spectrum in the long run... how does that change your work?]

FlashmaticThe idea that someone can program our consumption is becoming obsolete, and fast. The front page of the paper disappears in a digital world, where there is no front page--merely the page I got to by clicking on a link from a friend. The tenth minute of a sitcom isn't necessarily the part that comes after the ninth minute, and in fact, I might never even get to minute nine.

Fifty years ago, the remote control freaked out TV executives. Today, the exception is the linear consumer, the rare bird that sits from the beginning to the end. Weird is in, mass is fading.

In a world of surfers, all you can do is work to make the best wave you can. The real revolution is that you get to make waves, not just ride them.
 

smastio

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
414
Location
St. Charles IL
Name
Steve Mastio
"Turn off the blacklight and go to bed. That was a long post about nothing." - I thought that this would be the response from some!

The thoughts were by Seth Godin... :) ... to each their own!

Seth's Bio:

SETH GODIN has written thirteen books that have been translated into more than thirty languages. Every one has been a bestseller. He writes about the post-industrial revolution, the way ideas spread, marketing, quitting, leadership and most of all, changing everything.

American Way Magazine calls him, "America's Greatest Marketer," and his blog is perhaps the most popular in the world written by a single individual. His latest book, Poke The Box is a call to action about the initiative you're taking - in your job or in your life, and Seth once again breaks the traditional publishing model by releasing it through The Domino Project.
 

rhino1

Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2007
Messages
1,076
Location
Evansville IN
Name
Chris Bolin
I like it that you posted it without giving credit to the true author then when critiqued you carry on about the author. First plagiarize the man's work then praise him. Classy.
 

smastio

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2010
Messages
414
Location
St. Charles IL
Name
Steve Mastio
I didn't post it for any other reason than to share good thinking with the class - I said:
"I find these types of brilliant thoughts all the time... this one I thought that I should share with the class."... lighten up frances! I never said that I wrote it. Much success with the biz...
 
F

FB7777

Guest
Cmon Steve this ain't newbeeville, either you're a lying POS, or you're stupid.

These types of softsell motivational clips are better for other boards...not mikeysboard.

Your motivation is to gain business for your product under the guise of sharing with the class.

This board is inherently averse to salesmen.

No one is stopping you from posting whatever you want, but you should expect that a few people will give you a hard time. Especially when e eryone knows the intention behind the post
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom