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hugh macleod

Since reviewing Hugh MacLeod’s “Ignore Everybody”, I’ve been giving lots of thought to the nature of creativity. Why does creativity matter? Because, as Bryan Eisenberg points out, most marketers suffer from impotence. And not because they have bad ideas for how to promote their product, but because they don’t have enough ideas on how to have a different product. It reminds me of the story in Harry Beckwith’s “Selling the Invisible”
– one of thinks’ 12 most important books of the last 10 years – about Beckwith wasting 3 days trying to write copy advertising a new product. A flawed product as it turns out. As Beckwith’s boss noted, “If it’s that hard to write the ad, fix the product.”

Is your product or service equally flawed? What can you do about it? Read on, Big Thinkers. Read on:

Hope this stir your creative juices, Big Thinkers. Use ‘em to hit the ground running next week.



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Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up. – Pablo Picasso

Guy: “I can’t decide what I want to be: a millionaire or an artist.” Girl: “Can’t you just compromise? Become a millionaire artist or something.” – Hugh MacLeod


In the last few days, I’ve been spending a lot of time surrounding myself with art. Not High Art. Just art. Creative work, masterfully done. And all of it commercially successful. From the simply amazing Pixar film Wall-E to listening to Frank Sinatra in his prime or re-reading J.K. Rowling’s outstanding Harry Potter series, I was struck by both their beauty and appeal and by the question, “How can I make my work more like this? How can I make it more creative? Can I make it more successful, too?”

Cartoonist, blogger and marketing wiz Hugh MacLeod – @gapingvoid on Twitter, GapingVoid.com on the web – gives one possible answer to these questions in his new book Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity. In 40 terse chapters – some little more than a single cartoon – Hugh gives his views on the essence of creativity, its driving forces, its ineffable appeal, its continuing pull. Funny, profane and insightful, Hugh builds on his earlier work – “How to Be Creative” – to provide less of a roadmap and more of a travelogue, cataloging his learnings along the creative road. And like my post advising you to do what you love, Hugh doesn’t guarantee fame or fortune. But, wouldn’t you prefer to enjoy what you’re working on regardless of the outcome. And, just as Pixar, Rowling and Sinatra have shown, sometimes those outcomes succeed beyond your wildest imagination.



Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today.

Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow Tim on Twitter.

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Hugh MacLeod wondered on Twitter today whether technology renders cities obsolete. Tara Hunt, a city-dweller, worries about the fit of expensive clothes and wants to buy locally. What’s interesting is that Tara and Hugh represent alternative views to how the evolving local, social web works. Hugh lives in the middle of nowhere, while Tara lives in downtown San Francisco. Hugh knows that the web allows him to experience everything that Tara can while enjoying the slower pace of country life. Tara knows that technology has its limits and wants to make the most of city life by experiencing products before purchasing.

Sure, they use the web in different ways. Hugh shops and buys online (generally) because he has fewer options in his more rural locale. Tara uses the web, (Twitter in this case) to get recommendations for the best place to shop/buy her products. Your customers may be city dwellers using the web to find your local store before stopping in. They may be country folks using the web to buy from you because they lack local alternatives.

Or vice versa.

Place is only relevant to your customer when it meets their needs. What matters more is whether Tara or Hugh can find you, whether they can browse you, and whether they can buy from you, online or offline. What are you doing to make sure you can meet both Tara’s needs and Hugh’s?

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gapingvoid: “cartoons drawn on the back of business cards”: microsoft and chess pieces

December 26, 2007 Marketing

I follow Hugh MacLeod (aka gapingvoid) religiously. I read Hugh’s blog. I follow him on Twitter. I plan to buy business cards from him.
Why? Why so much emphasis on one guy?
Because he’s the most original thinker in the community. Period.
Case in point: microsoft and chess pieces.
You can choose to be a King. You [...]

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