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  • Seths Blog

    The inanity of the American consumer Never before in history have so many needed so little. "What do you get for someone who has everything" takes on a whole new meaning in the face of the BTB TEM 500. This device will toast your muffin, poach an egg and heat your ham, all at... more

    Reviewed by xtel Nov 28 2005, 03:09am ( 79 reviews ) typepad.com

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  • Rated by CJRocker on Oct 19, 7:51pm

    Seth Rocks!

  • Reviewed by T1MWOOD on Sep 01, 8:39pm

    A real leader in brand thinking.

  • Rated by moneymin on Jul 02, 2:58am

    A blog worth looking at, although we're not completly sure we understand it, check it out.

  • Rated by gimbij on Jun 25, 8:34am

    I've been looking around for simple designs for personal/professional websites and blogs, and I like this guys' stuff. I absolutely love how he ditched what most consider a necessity: a header. That alone gave him a lot more real estate above the fold. This practically bleeds efficiency.

  • Rated by jmarbach on Apr 26 2009, 3:56pm

    Thinking outside the box. A different marketing perspective.

  • Rated by KatieWest on Apr 09 2009, 5:20pm

    Loving this blog.

  • Rated by seekerwjk1 on Feb 28 2009, 5:15pm

    keen observer, profound thinker

  • Rated by Rarst on Jan 04 2009, 2:14pm

    Great blog, short but excellent posts to read and think about.

  • Rated by ajanelle on Jan 04 2009, 9:33am

    From the page: "Was Jackson Pollock a good painter? The critics at the time certainly didn't think so. Twyla Tharp's London debut was panned. The Prius was largely ignored by car magazines, mostly because it wasn't a very good car. If we define 'good' as showing reasonable skill in the expected areas of performance, then good is not only useless, it's dangerous. Good authors rarely change minds. Good politicians rarely get elected. The worst thing you can be given as a marketer is a good product to sell."

  • Rated by jeffgoins on Dec 22 2008, 5:49pm

    One of my favorite blogs on marketing, leadership, and business. Godin is just full of wisdom. What's more, he often roots for the little guy or the seemingly hopeless cause.