Why you shouldn't care about what everyone thinks of you and your posts on STEEM or anywhere else
If I say Italy, what do you think of?
Right, pizza.
But some of you have better taste than me, and you might have something else come to mind:Pasta.
And where is pasta most popular in the world?
Italy!
Nah… just kidding. It’s the USA.
And where there’s tons of pasta, there are dozens of flavors of pasta sauce.
That’s important because…
Because I’m going to change your view on some things in life, using the winning pasta sauce analogy.
Ready?
Why should I care?
OK, so our story starts with a nice, roundish, super-smart guy named Howard Moskowitz, who disrupted the food industry in the US.
One day, Pepsi called Howard to say:
“Yo Howard, we want something called Pepsi Max. It’s like diet, but with a stupider name. Now we need you to tell us how sweet it should be.
"Meaning – what would be the perfect level of sweetness (aspartame) that would make sure the average American gets addicted to Pepsi Max?”
Howard was up for the challenge.
Well, he gets paid well, so why not:
“Here’s what we should do” – he said to Pepsi – “let’s get thousands of people in a huge room, and let them drink Pepsi Max with different levels of sweetness (8.1%, 8.2%… 12%). Then we’ll crunch the numbers, and we’ll know what to choose.”
And so they did.
They gave tons of people free drinks (with different sweetness levels), and little notes to fill up; after a while, they gathered the notes, stuck them in Howard’s hand, and sent him to his hotel to crunch a million numbers.
Our Howard is excited. He does the whole thing, but then – to his surprise – the numbers look bad.
Why bad? Because Howard wanted to see a bell curve.
(Now just in case you’re not sure what a bell curve is – it means that the results of a test with many points looks like a little mountain – many people choose one number, and the further we go from this number, the less people who chose this number).
So Howard wished the numbers would look something like this:
Then Howard could tell Pepsi, “Listen, the average American wants 9.5% sweetness. Now give me my money, see you later.”
But instead, Howard got something that looked more like this:
WHAT?!!! How can someone figure out the right sweetness from such results?!!
Bummer.
Howard and the guys from Pepsi were sure something was wrong — either the numbers, or the sweetness levels in the cups in the test, or whatever.
They didn’t know what to do and so they just picked a number to go with.
Howard got his money, but so sad he was…
Don’t be sad, Howard
One sleepless night, Howard suddenly understood what the problem was.
The test was just fine. It was the way he viewed the food industry that was wrong.
He called the guy from Pepsi, and shouted:
“You’ve been looking for the perfect Pepsi.
You’re wrong.
You should be looking for the perfect Pepsis!
”“???” – answered the confused guy.
“Yes! Yes! There is no one single perfect Pepsi. There are perfect Pepsis!
”The guy didn’t get Howard so he hung up the phone.
But our Howard didn’t give up. He tried to explain his new eureka! to everyone, but no one really got him…
You see, back in the day, the food industry was guided by a simple, but ultimately incorrect, ideology: Make food and drinks that the average American will love, and then you’ll be super rich and sell a lot.
And if we put many Americans in a room and ask them what they want to eat/drink, they’ll know what to tell you.
But one day, Howard gets a phone call from Prego (an American pasta sauce brand), and they believe in his idea, and want his help developing many perfect pasta sauces.
Howard asks them to create 45 different flavors, and he starts to travel the whole US with the sauces in his suitcase.
A few months later, Howard calls Prego to tell them they’re going to be rich.
So they listen.
“Listen. In addition to the plain and spicy sauces you already have selling, there’s a new flavor you have to make. And it will make you millions.”
The Millions!
Howard talked about the “Extra Chunky” sauce.Apparently, one-third of the audience really loved the Extra Chunky flavor.
Which means that till now, 1 of every 3 Americans hadn’t had a chance to find the pasta sauce they love the most.
Because there’s nowhere you could buy anything else other than plain or spicy, and in focus groups, no one ever said they want a chunky sauce.
Maybe they didn’t even know chunky sauce existed.
So, Prego – being smart – created the chunky sauce. And that year alone, they made a pretty chunky $600 million!
Nice, right?
OK, so 30 years later, we now have 40 flavours for whatever food or drink we want. Too many? Maybe.
But everyone has a beloved flavor.(This beautiful story is told by Malcolm Gladwell – one of my favourite writers – in his TED talk from 2004.)
Now, let’s talk about you
Nice story, you’re thinking.
You made me hungry, you’re thinking.
But what’s the lesson?
So happy you asked.
The pasta story was just the way for you to realize that you shouldn’t try to be everyone’s flavor.
I mean, you can try to make everyone like you and what you write or say, but that’s kind of a bummer.
You’ll get what you want: Average content for average people who like your work in an average way.
Say, they’ll be 60% happy with you.
But what if you could choose to be a very specific flavor?
What if you could make a smaller segment of the people to be 95% happy with you and your work?
And the rest of the people? Irrelevant.
Me? I have a newsletter that is sent weekly to 25,000 creatives (over at The nuSchool).
Some of my emails are provocative, or using swear words, or make fun of things, and mainly about myself.
Some people hate it, others think it’s not professional.
I know this because they tell me, write me, get angry at me.
But the people who like it? Well, they REALLY like it.
They send me emails to thank me for being so blunt and bold.So what do you prefer?
Do you want everyone to “kind of” like you? Or do you want just some of the people to REALLY like you and your work?
The faster you get to understand who is your audience, what is the type of readers that will really like you and your work, the better chance you’ll have succeeding at just being yourself.
And believe me, you can be pretty damn good at being yourself.
Hey, pretty good post. Enjoyable style and nice message.
Have you read Cialdini? Is that standard reading for TED presenters?
Also, what if you wind up being spicy pickle sauce? You know, that one flavor that pretty much nobody likes? I guess at that point you should just hug the market you do have as tightly as you can.
Maybe that's where I find the analogy a little off. I know it's supposed to be about expressing your true self and not some shell of what you think people might like, because companies make a dozen flavors of the same product to fill customer needs, but on a place like steemit, you are the flavor, whereas with Prego, the profits feed in from every flavor to the top.
Maybe it's the author who is Prego, and each post is a new shipment of sauce: you might have your top sellers, but don't be afraid to experiment with spicy pickle from time to time.
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