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How Seth Godin Turns Browsers To Buyers



You learn from the masters, right?

According to Ad Age, Seth ranks number one on their Power 150 web marketing blogs. If he’s having a down day, he may fall all the way to number two. Don’t worry. Check back in a few hours. He’s probably number one again.

You can learn a lot by monitoring Seth. You don’t have to agree with him. But sit back, watch what he does and take notes.

Take Twitter, for example.

Seth Godin doesn’t use Twitter. And promises he never will. Yet, few of us get tweeted as often as Seth.

Ok he does. Well, kinda. He links his blog to his Twitter. When he hits publish on his blog – which is every day without fail – a tweet gets sent out.

His 45,486 followers take over from there.

What’s the trick?

Here’s a clue.

‘You can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want. ~Zig Ziglar

You Are the Most Important Person on Seth’s Site.

Why?

Seth’s site is designed to be read.

It has:

  • No irritating popups asking you to sign for a newsletter.
  • No Flash intros that waste your time.
  • No plug-ins that must be installed.
  • No distracting banner ads.
  • No videos.
  • No frequent changes to the site design to keep things ‘fresh’. KiSS is the mantra.

Instead…

  • You, the reader, are the most important person on the site.
  • The site is designed to make it easy for you to read.
  • It would be hard to design a site that was more user-friendly.
  • It loads super fast, which Google also loves. Google gives you brownie points for a fast-loading site.

Great Titles

Look at these titles. You want to read them, right? Seth knows how to write great hooks. Short titles that pull you in, generate curiosity and make you want to read more.

  • Sell the problem. No business buys a solution for a problem they don’t have.
  • Every activity worth doing has a learning curve.
  • Build in virality.
  • Subscriptions beat one-off sales.
  • Treat different customers differently.

Brevity

A second thing about his titles. He keeps them short. Often two or three words.

Why so short?

A few reasons. One is that it makes them easier to share, another is that they’re easier to retweet (long titles may get chopped off when others add their comments) and they look great when compiled into a book.

The word count is low, sometimes less than a hundred words. But, like all great writers, he can condense his material into a few paragraphs.

Here’s an experiment.

Read through his articles and see what you can remove without affecting the meaning. Not much, is there?

Seth is also a great marketer. He packages his content so it’s easy to adapt to other media. For example, most of the posts in ‘Small is the New Big’ came from his website.

And how can you not like a book called, All Marketers Are Liars?

Unique

When you make yourself unique – and do something successful – others take note.

The web is full of imitators, wannabees and copycats. When you do something a little different that works, others want to look. If you do it very well, you become the template for others to follow.

For example?

Look at Leo Babauta. His ‘zen’ blog has launched a thousand websites that ape his minimal, simple values.

Seth has spawned his imitators.

Few, in any, produce content as intriguing, confident and sharable as he does.

Evangelists

The fact the he doesn’t use twitter AND promises us that he never will encourages other to carry the flame for him.

Seth has a rabid fan base. Most will tweet and re-tweet his posts even BEFORE they’ve read them.

Because Seth can’t (or won’t) they spread the word for him.

Rabid Fans

His followers are fanatic about Seth.

Don’t believe me?

If you feel brave, make a comment that doesn’t support the word of Seth or dares to challenge it. In Linchpin, he talks about the Lizard Brain.

I’ve read comments about the Lizard Brain in other blogs. Some folks seem to take it literally as though it’s a fact. Try explaining to them that there is no Lizard Brain.

Be prepared for some very negative comments.

Frequency

Seth posts every day.

His blog is like a newspaper. New day, new edition. And the quality is very high. No filler. No fluff.

Fans check in first thing every morning to get the skinny…. and then start tweeting.

His site shows the number of tweets and shares. This encourages readers to find the most popular articles and spend more time on the site.

No Images

Breaking all SEO rules, Seth rarely uses images to jazz up his articles. He wastes no time on eye candy or visual cliches. The focus is on words.

Google Juice

and because he posts every day, Google rates the site higher than his competitors. Google has always favored sites that post regularly. This year it announced that it’s algorithm was updated to favor/reward etc sites that produce content more frequently.

Non-Social Social Media

The irony is that Seth doesn’t interact with his community. He doesn’t reply to comments on his blog – you can’t even leave comments – and his Facebook page has little interaction that I can see.

Somehow this encourages others to:

  • Speak on his behalf and spread the word.
  • Defend any criticism of his writings.
  • Interpret his material so others sees what he really means. How accurate they are is open to debate.

The point is that all this creates buzz.

More buzz, more sales!

Call to Action

Call to Action means getting the reader to do something, such as subscribing to a newsletter, joining your Facebook Fan page or buying something. The site makes this very easy to:

  • Buy the books
  • Read the articles
  • Share the love

It’s simple. And it works.

Over to you.

What’s the one thing you’ve learnt from Seth that makes him stand out? And how have you adapted it into your social media strategy?

PS – please click on the ShareThis button and share the love.



The Author:

Ivan helps people run their online business more effectively. Find out at www.ivanwalsh.com http://www.ivanwalsh.com

Add Your Comment

  • http://twitter.com/fredchannel Fred

    Great post Ivan. I follow Seth Godin a lot if there’s something I’ve learnt is that in order to stand out you must be as remarkable as possible. Be “Purple”.
    We do a lot of brainstorming with the team and make a constant effort to come up with new ideas, contacts, videos that will be of value to our community.
    Regarding his twitter and facebook accounts being just news walls, I wouldn’t use that as an example and make anybody, especially corporations think that that is correct. It’s not.
    Seth Godin is an enlightened individual and he was famous and a guru, before Twitter and Facebook. That means that a lot of people already new about his value, therefore, using platforms as a newswall will still get attention simply because he is who he is. Even if you are a professional with 30 years of experience and plunge into social media, you’ll see that that won’t work.
    Maybe this is not the best example but take any celebrity opening a FB or Twitter account and in two days they’ll have 200,000 friends/follower without even publishing the first post.

  • http://www.btbtraining.com/blog Niall Devitt

    Welcome to Bloggertone Ivan, I absolutely agree that Seth’s content is designed to be read. He constantly challenges us to think in a new way, yet his message is not complex and his posts easy to read. The guy looks at the world in a different/better way than the rest of us but when you read him, you go, yeah! That’s how it is. Thanks for sharing, Niall

  • Danny Beere

    Good job Ivan, really enjoyed reading this. I think he’s got it going on good the way people spread the word about his posts and as you said above “speak on his behalf”. His website is pretty cool too. Looking forward to reading some of his posts now. Cheers, Dan

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Thanks Danny.

    Something I forgot to add is that he answers most all his email, which is pretty incredible.

    The answer may not be very wordy, but he’ll reply.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Hey Niall,

    He frames things in ways that others don’t and is not afraid of contradicting himself. This is where many folks fall down. Always double-checking that they need to be correct.

    Sometimes you need to get it out there and see what happens.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Hi Fred,

    That’s a good point. Guy Kawasaki is kind of similar as he was a best-selling author before Twitter. And again he doesn’t engage all that much with his followers but, in all honesty, it would be like running a forum if he or Seth were to open it up.

    A good template for me is how Chris Brogan runs his site and distributes content in different directions.

    The last thing about Seth is that the polished prose didn’t happen by accident.

    It looks real easy when you see it on the page but you know the guy really worked on it to get those sentences so finely-tuned.

  • http://www.sensei-winbeforehand.co.uk/ dawnbaird

    He’s breaking all the rules, and yet… I’m gonna have to read this blog post very carefully again! Thanks for sharing.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Thanks Dawn,

    Small is the Big New converted me to Seth. It’s all about creating buzz. Brian Clark is also worth tracking down.

  • http://www.sensei-winbeforehand.co.uk/ dawnbaird

    New name for me, will def look him up, thanks.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    you’ll catch him on Copyblogger.com. His are the must reads :)

  • http://www.johnpaulaguiar.com John Paul

    Great post.. nice layout. Seth is awesome and I RT his stuff all the time,, so I know what your talking about. The man is smart and a leader.

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  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    The way he leads is also interesting. It’s all very low key and understated. The WHAM! you get what he’s saying later on and has a huge impact. He’s one of the few business writers I re-read. Permission Marketing is another great read.

  • http://www.seefincoaching.com/blog Elaine Rogers

    Hi Ivan,
    Welcome to Bloggertone and I really enjoyed reading your post, very nicely written and well laid out, and reflects a great respect for a man talked about from Beijing to Alaska :)
    I feel so much more encouraged to read more of Godin now

  • http://blog.myprojecttracker.com Barney Austen

    Hi Ivan. Welcome to Bloggertone. Agree with every aspect in this post with regard to Seth. As Dawn has said – will read it again for lessons! Thanks for sharing.

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