Book Review: The Icarus Deception
Written by Anthony Demangone
I've become quite a fan of Seth Godin in the past few years. Â I reference his blog quite often. Â And I won't apologize for doing so. Â It is good, good stuff.
I've been reading his most recent book: The Icarus Deception. I think it is well worth your read. Â
My take on the book. Â Godin argues that we live in a post-industrialist world. Â The industrialist world was a world of more efficient production. Â Making things faster. Cheaper. Â Those days are gone. Today's world is one of connections. Â Consumers have more choices. And so do "creators." Â The barriers to reaching a market have been greatly reduced, if not altogether eliminated. Â Everyone can become self-published. Â Make a YouTube video. Â Connect via the web.Â
This is good and bad. Â Because the barriers are so low, everyone can pitch an idea. Or a book. Or a training webinar. Â Or write a management blog, even. Â So, it is easy to enter the market, but very hard to stand out. Â
Godin, again and again, hammers at one of the main points of his book. Â If you create something - it must be art. It must make a connection. If not, then why?
The laborer in the world of connection and art embraces the opportunity to do a little bit more, not less. Since emotional labor scales so dramatically, the ability to bring a little bit more to the table is the chance of a lifetime. Â "A little more" compounds, because ideas spread. Â A little more compounds because in a connected economy, word spreads and people flock to art that means more.
You don't need more activity; you have to dig deeper instead.
Godin is seen as a marketing guru, but I think his genius goes further. Â We live in a crowded world. Everyone has a webpage, LinkedIn profile, Facebook page, and Twitter Account. Â I get email pitches and watch television commercials, but rarely do I see art. Â Rarely do I see someone who dug deep to impress or wow me.Â
Those that push for that, who dig deep, surely take chances by not playing it safe. Â But they give themselves a chance to be so much more.
So, here's to digging deep this week, everyone. Â Let's make some art.