From the monthly archives:

January 2010

LINCHPIN - Seth Godin

Seth Godin is remarkable. Always. At least, I think he is.

But when I read an excerpt of his new book, LINCHPIN – let’s just say I felt a bit let down!

In this post, I’m going to explore WHY.

First, a quick reminder about the fallacy of trying to judge or describe the whole after seeing only a part – like the 5 blind men who described an elephant variously as being like a rope, a tree trunk, a knife, a rough carpet and a thick snake (after feeling, respectively, the tail, leg, tusk, back and trunk).

All I’ve read is the digital excerpt, NOT the entire book.

Still, I had hoped for some a-ha moments in even that sample – so when I shared this short message with a good friend inside TRIIIBES.com, I wasn’t sure what to expect in reply. I wrote to Marcos Gaser:

“Maybe Seth set his bar too high with Tribes. Maybe I wasn’t in the right mood while reading it. Maybe Linchpin just describes what’s in my daily routine. Whatever the reason, I just didn’t find that magical ‘A-ha’ in the excerpt, the way I’m used to with Seth’s writing. I’ll give it another read a day or two later, to see if it’s ‘just me’!”

Well, let’s just say I didn’t need to read it again. Because Marcos’ short, insightful reply made the reasons clear to me in a flash of brilliance…

I am not a marketer by study or experience, and so Seth Godin’s earlier books had many a-ha moments – because they were about marketing.

TRIBES, and more so LINCHPIN, are not about marketing any more – they are about personal development.

LINCHPIN (and even TRIBES, in a way) is about throwing off the shackles of ‘conventional mediocrity’, about ‘following one’s heart’ and ‘making a difference’, about ‘attracting your audience by being unique, special, meaningful’ – and those are things I am ALREADY working on, understand better, have a certain experience with!

The essential premise is that “Everyone is an ARTIST”. And here, in Seth’s words, “artist means someone willing to stand up, stand out and make change.”

Maybe more traditional, corporate and ‘factory world’ readers in Seth’s audience (who may have viewed his earlier work with some ennui and a “So, what’s new?” attitude) will find many a-ha moments in LINCHPIN, the way I did in Purple Cow, or Free Prize Inside, or All Marketers Are Liars, or Survival Is Not Enough.

Like Rajesh Setty says in his very nice review of LINCHPIN,

“In LINCHPIN, Seth focuses on BEING rather than DOING. Seth’s compassionate plea is for everyone to ‘be’ an artist – be a Linchpin rather than a cog in the wheel.

Does this sound like a familiar theme from my blog posts here?

Having explored how difficult, scary, yet fulfilling it is to stop being a cog in the wheel, and for many years seeing one important purpose of my own blog to inspire as many others as possible to stop hesitating and take that plunge to ‘follow their heart’, I have probably instinctively tuned out much of what I read in LINCHPIN as being “stuff I already know, realize and completely agree with”… and might have dismissed on that ground alone!

So, thank you Marcos for showing me why I probably thought LINCHPIN was “nothing new”… and how, for that very reason, I need to tell many people who read my blog to get their own copy of LINCHPIN – and then think hard about making that decision to make a difference, in any way they like!

In his interview with Hugh McLeod, Seth Godin ends with:

“My work is done here, as the saying goes. To unleash something like this on the world, to go out this far on a limb and have people support you and embrace you and run with it… it’s the most ama­zing feeling.”

Do you want that feeling for yourself?

Then you should read LINCHPINand then follow YOUR heart.

Another good reason to do it is because, usually, reading Seth Godin’s books has nice “fringe benefits” – like TRIBES got me entry into Triiibes.com, a place where I’ve met some amazing LINCHPINS.

Here are a few reviews of LINCHPIN by fellow Triiibesters – you may find them interesting too:

Today, on his blog, Seth said: “It took me ten years to write this book. I’m hoping it changes a few people.”

The book is LINCHPIN.

You can get your copy here.

Read it – then decide.

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Cremation

by Dr.Mani on January 26, 2010

Yesterday, I attended a funeral.

Indian custom dictates a long series of ‘last rites’. When the seemingly endless sequence of rituals ended after nearly an hour, the mortal remains were ceremonially consecrated to electric heat of the modern crematorium.

We waited outside for an hour, chatting aimlessly about various things – subliminally aware, all the while, about the event we were soon about to experience.

Soon, the time came.

A young man, bent a little with the weight of his burden, came out carrying a metal box by it’s handles. Each side of the square box measured about 18 inches, and it was 3 inches deep.

It contained all that was left of the man we once knew, respected and loved.

Cremation shifts many paradigms about what we value in life.

Everyone, no matter how great or small, rich or poor, young or old, powerful or weak, influential or ignored – everyone will be reduced to a box full of ash… literally!

Isn’t that a great perspective from which to focus on more than the merely physical?

Think outside the “box”!

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Expertise – And It’s Implications

I’m an expert in pediatric heart surgery.
You probably wouldn’t take my professional opinion about obstetrics and gynaecology very seriously.
And I don’t blame you for laughing in my face if I presume to offer technical advice and opinion about designing a microprocessor chip, or programming security software for a bank, or [...]

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Changing Inside

CAUTION: The theme of this blog post – and the video I link to – is NOT for children or squeamish, delicate people. It is raw, painful, and real. Skip it if you’re the kind who is too strongly affected by hearing of such things. You have been warned!
After four decades [...]

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When Technology Meets Spirituality

Bill Gates is on Twitter. I followed him. One of his early tweets linked to “The Gates Notes”. I read some.
And paused, deep in thought.
In my professional life, I’m a technologist and technician. Pediatric heart surgery is among the most technically advanced, evolved and challenging medical specialities.
The Norwood operation for Hypoplastic [...]

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Intention Versus Impact

I’ve often wondered about the phrase, “The road to hell is paved with good intentions.” It has conjured up different images and meanings at various phases of my life.
Especially now.
My marketing training over the past decade has taught me to measure and track things that can be. Like how many people respond to [...]

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Feeling Intensely

Today is different. Ever since waking up, I’ve been feeling things differently.
More intensely.
It started first thing in the morning. Being disturbed early on a Sunday morning by bright sunlight streaming in through half-drawn curtains, the buzzing of a mosquito in my ear, would regularly leave me annoyed. Not today. I felt [...]

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Choosing Your Tribe – And Tools

Two young men joined the same online social network. They were very much alike, these two young men. Both had been average students, both were pleasant personalities, and both – as excited early adopters of technology are – were filled with dreams for the future.
Recently, these men reviewed their last 25 months on [...]

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Heart-break in Haiti

I shared my thoughts here about the horrific disaster that hit Haiti yesterday night.
For the past few years, I’ve been involved in helping Frank McKinney’s “Caring House Project” which builds homes for the homeless in Haiti.
As soon as I heard about the special initiative Frank’s team is taking to secure planes to fly immediately to [...]

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Stories Save Sanity

The worst earthquake to hit Haiti in over two centuries has affected over 3 million people and left thousands dead.
Haiti is close to my heart. And my mind has been numb ever since I heard the news, upon returning from a day-long meeting with officials regarding tax-exempt status of my non-profit Foundation.
The work I’m [...]

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