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Inspiration Is the Root of Commitment

I’m going to continue another day or two on this idea of commitment. Forgive me if you find it tedious, but it’s a really big, really important topic and I think it will lead somewhere helpful – I started with the Evolution of Commitment and A Convenient Truth.

Getting people to commit to spending money with your firm, and perhaps equally as important commit to returning to spend money, commit to passing your message and telling your story, and commit to referring your products and services, has become more complex in this everything is free, information overload world we find ourselves in.

Today I want to explore another prime driver of commitment – Inspiration. While we will go out of our way for an experience that’s convenient, we will mortgage our assets for an experience that inspires. Inspiration is so thoroughly lacking in most of our daily lives that when we find it, be it in a person, innovation, or organization, we get committed to keeping it.

It would be very easy to cite a company like Apple as a great example of an organization that inspires loyalty and commitment, but that’s just too easy. I’d like to share a couple examples that to me feel more personal in nature.

Seth Godin in quite possibly the most popular marketing blogger and author of the day. His readers are committed to helping him succeed. When Seth mentioned my new book in a blog post about referrals, several hundred people ran out and bought the book. Mind you this was not a review, it was a one sentence mention. I read Seth’s books and I enjoy them. But, and I hope this doesn’t come off wrong, I don’t always implement new strategies and tactics I find in those books. What Seth’s books do, in fact what all of Seth’s 300 word or less blog posts do, is inspire me. I always come away feeling better for having taken the time to visit and that, I believe, is one of the secrets to the success of brand Seth.

Threadless Airstream
Inside the Threadless Office – Image borrowed from Guy Kawasaki

Threadless makes t-shirts, but there’s nothing too inspiring about that. The thing is Threadless makes the coolest t-shirts in the coolest way. The designs, promotion and most likely a great deal of the marketing is done by the customers. The image above taken from inside their Chicago headquarters gives some feel for why the employees are inspired by working in a playground setting. Threadless inspires by taking advantage of the Internet’s two-way nature to involve customers in the process of creating their product. This innovation inspires profits, customers and competitors alike.

37Signals boasts over 5 million users to online services with a ton of competitors. The company’s customers are fanatical in their support because the software does just what it’s suppose to do and little more – that’s an inspiring idea. The company inspires through simple ideas and incredible design. People are drawn to the almost counter intuitive innovation that holds on dearly to simplicity. The organization lives these beliefs and has been profitable from day one.

  • Useful is forever. Bells and whistles wear off, but usefulness never does. We build useful software.
  • Our customers are our investors. They fund our daily operations by paying for our products. We answer to them, not outside investors or the stock market.
  • Clarity is king. Buzzwords, lingo, and sensationalized marketing-speak have no place at 37signals.

If you or organization does nothing that inspires, no simple concept, no incredible design, no earth shattering experience, no commitment to an idea, no story that attracts – how will people commit?

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  • http://twitter.com/StartupSidekick Jason Sullivan

    John, these commitment articles are probably the best articles I've read all summer. For some reason, the topic of commitment is not discussed enough.

    Inspiration is integral if you want commitment. I mentioned that I buy a lot of books, and I am similar to you; I don't always enact the tactics mentioned, but I usually come away feeling inspired that I can leverage something I've just read to help my business grow. Inspiration is so important.

    I have seen Tim Ferriss (author of the 4 hour work week) and his book come under attack on message boards, only to have legions of his fans appear from nowhere to defend him. Did the book turn these supporters into successful business people? Not all of them. No chance. But the book did inspire them, and because of that, they will defend it (and probably buy future editions). I am a big fan of Ferris's book, but I know that probably less than 10% of the people that read it will truly come up with a profitable business. The percentage of people that read it and feel inspired is probably close to 80%. This 80% ends up being much more significant, as they will purchase future editions from him, even though they never truly succeeded on the book's teachings alone. It is the intrinsic inspiration produced by the book that drives its success

    Jason
    http://twitter.com/StartupSidekick (Follow me on Twitter for fresh entrepreneurial advice)

  • http://www.ducttapemarketing.com/blog ducttape

    Hey Jason, glad you are a fan – your Tim Ferris example is perfect for all the reasons you mention – inspiration sells!

  • Findpaluche

    John, I just read your book and I must say great job! You really give the information a small business needs. I've been in marketing for sometime now and I learned a lot from this book. My company is a medium sized company, but nevertheless, applying your ideas and techniques makes my company that much more personal. Just wanted to stop by and say thank you!

  • Rainbow Vistas

    Very good topic discussed…
    Very interesting lines are providers…
    This article helped me a lot..
    Try to discuss more helping topics…

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  • http://www.ducttapemarketing.com/blog ducttape

    Great to hear – be sure to let me know some of the specific things you took action on.

  • Sean Mason

    they will defend it (and probably buy future editions). I am a big fan of Ferris's book, but I know that probably less than 10% of the people that read it will truly come up with a profitable business. The percentage of people that read it and feel inspired is probably close to 90%. This 90% ends up being much more significant, as they will purchase future editions from him, even though they never truly succeeded on the book's teachings alone. It is the intrinsic inspiration produced by the book that drives its success

  • Sean Mason

    They will defend it (and probably buy future editions). I am a big fan of Ferris's book, but I know that probably less than 10% of the people that read it will truly come up with a profitable business. The percentage of people that read it and feel inspired is probably close to 90%. This 90% ends up being much more significant, as they will purchase future editions from him, even though they never truly succeeded on the book's teachings alone. It is the intrinsic inspiration produced by the book that drives its success……………………………..
    ———————————————————–

  • http://www.thenewbusinessblog.com/marketing/perpetual-traffic-formula-review/ Perpetual Traffic Formula

    I'm a big fan of 37signals and like the fact I know I'm always going to get something good with them.

  • http://www.leadsexplorer.com LEADSExplorer

    Quality always surfaces and wins in the end.
    How many other services have been hyped and pushed on to the market by PR, bloggers and events (Demo / TC50 / …).
    37 Signals never participated in any of these still they managed to get 5mio users.
    We all can learn from 37 Signals (we too)

  • Findpaluche

    I was looking for a way to make my company more personal to the customers we already have accounts with; however, sending generic thank you cards by mail never did the trick. Now, I took in your ideas for direct mailing (bulk looking packages) and included a list of the successful cases we have produced for them. Every single (100%) of the bulk packages I sent out were responded to with a big THANK YOU (I sent cookies in the packages). After reading your book I pretty much have taken on the philosophy, “If it sounds too simple, do it!”