Sarah Dopp points us to a Korean site she’s obsessed with.
Humans respond to faces more than any other image. Do something to a face and it becomes magnetic.
Something this simple could spread very fast and very far. Almost like a pretty bad science fiction movie, but real. I know that I have an almost irresistible urge to cover one eye now… I just can’t decide which one.
November 23, 2005
Just had dinner with my dad and his high school buddies. One is college-educated (Dartmouth), a very successful professional. And he’s about seventy.
On the way out the door, he asked, "What’s an MP3?"
Before you decide that everyone knows something (or no one does), take a second to realize that you’re wrong.
Here are nine Big Moo authors.
The first person to identify all of them, in order, by email, will receive a signed copy of The Big Moo (well, signed by more than half of us, anyway). No purchase necessary. Void where prohibited.
Contest expires December 1, 2005. Send your entries to me
[We have a winner! It took just a few minutes. Amazing. Congrats to Sean Johnson. They are, left to right, Polly, Dean, Tim, Chris, Heath, Kevin, Promise, Red and April.
Holy smokes you guys are good. No surprise.]
November 22, 2005
Acland finds the next big thing down under (six feet).
Coffins that make a statement. Why not? Acland Brierty…Designer coffins.
November 21, 2005
Twenty years ago, I participated in some pricing meetings on my new line of computer games. In the room were two Stanford MBAs, two Harvard MBAs and someone from Kellogg, I think. How did we decide between $24.95, $29.95 or $34.95?
We flipped a coin.
But we were scientific about it. A single elimination ladder, best of three.
Pricing has always been a combination of economics and marketing and luck. My hero Joel Spolsky (best engineer who knows how to write) has a piece on this at Joel on Software.
The thing is, I disagree with him.
Pricing is a very effective signaling device, no doubt about it. People (and businesses) assume that good stuff is worth more. People pay for stuff on eBay for stuff based on the velocity of the auction instead of the innate value of the item. Real estate brokers warn you that a house that doesn’t sell right away is hard to sell because people look at a house that’s been on the market for a few months differently. All irrational and all based on signaling.
The reason that lousy movies cost the same as blockbuster movies, though, doesn’t have to do with signalling. (the fear is that people won’t go to cheap movies because the cheap price will tell them it is a lousy movie). Of course, this isn’t what happens with DVD sales. They sell plenty of really cheap DVDs that you never heard of… for a lot less than the new Star Wars Movie. No, the pricing of movies has to do with industry traditions and being stuck. It’s just too hard to get everything in alignment and for all the players to say okay.
Which leads to the current debate over how much Apple should charge for iTunes. 99 cents a song is a great signal. It tells the purchaser that this is somehow "fair."
The record companies want to charge MORE for hot hits, though. The thing is, this will mean raising the average price, because for every song they sell for $2, don’t expect a lot of songs to cost five cents.
Which leads us to the wisdom of Jeff Bezos. There are two kinds of companies, Jeff says. Companies that work to lower prices (like Amazon, most of the time) and companies that work to raise prices (like the music industry, all of the time).
November 19, 2005
too easy, because the site is so so broken.
But the two frogs are off to an auspicious start. Link: Frog Review: Ticketmaster.
PS Frog 1 says he wants to remain anonymous, but if you’ve ever met him, the voice is a pretty big giveaway. These MIT guys never lose the nerdy accent.
November 18, 2005
At least for me, is that you always get more than you give.
Even if you don’t count the apple juice or fig newtons.
First, it’s about overcoming a basic primal fear
Second, you need to meditate while doing it. You really can’t take a phone call.
Here’s a neat idea: salesblood.org. Thanks, Sam.
November 17, 2005
A door to door salesman just walked into our offices in Irvington.
Tough job.
A job usually reserved for people selling advertising or janitorial services.
This was an assistant Vice President at Citibank. He’s wandering the halls, door by door, trying to sell business checking accounts.
Clearly, all that marble, all those tellers and all that advertising is not enough to meet aggressive growth targets.
Once your business becomes a commodity, you can struggle or you can re-invent. I consider door-to-door selling to be struggling.
Morty Schiller points out a valuable resource for those not persuaded by the turncoats at MIT: Aluminum Foil Deflector Beanie.
November 16, 2005
The last time I posted about subscribing by RSS was August. So, here we go again:
This blog has one of the fastest-growing RSS feed lists I know of, but it's still a scary-low percentage of my readership. With your help, we can fix that.
EXPLAINED: RSS is just a little peep, a signal, a ping that comes when a piece of software contacts a favorite blog or site, telling your computer that it has been updated. If you have an RSS reader (and they're free and easy, and two of the easiest live on the web so you don't even have to install anything), whenever a blog is updated, it shows up in your reader and you can catch up on the news. If there's nothing new, it doesn't show up and you don't have to waste time surfing around.
GETTING IT: All you have to do to subscribe to this blog is ONE of the following:
a. Look down the left side of this blog until you see the little MyYahoo logo. Click on that and you'll be taken to Yahoo where you can add this blog to your MyYahoo page (or add a MyYahoo page if you don't have one yet.)
b. click on this icon:
c. Copy the text in red below into your RSS reader.
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/index.rdf
d. Or click this link.
EVERYWHERE: RSS is just about everywhere you want it to be. So add other RSS feeds on stuff you care about. And if you want a downloadable reader, just go to google and search on "RSS reader" and the name of your computer OS. You'll find a bunch.
That's it. You're done.
Free, easy, permanent until you undo it and it'll save you time, tire wear and help you avoid male pattern baldness. Did I mention that it was free and it will save you time?
RSS is not just for nerds. Not anymore.