

“My mission is to help people to become who they seek to become, to cause the culture to become better in the way they seek to make it better, to help people help themselves go to where they want to go. “It turns out that positive thinking doesn’t help you do everything, but it helps you do anything better than negative thinking.” #3bookspodcast If you’re not happy with the story, tell yourself another story. “Your problem is not the outside world, your problem is the story you’re telling yourself about the outside world. Why does Seth think work/life balance is a lie? I got dipped at the library for free, but now I’ve ordered my own copy of The Dip through Amazon (12.95). That’s a little package with a lot of brain blowing wallop. How did Seth discover his ultimate mission. In all honestly, I didn’t expect a little 76-page book to blow my brain. What happened to Seth on a grounded United Airlines flight which prompted one his most remarkable insights into human nature? (And what is that insight?) Which of Seth's books did The Tipping Point inspire? What framework does Seth use to decide which "lines of business" he monetizes? What is "post-religious positive business-oriented evangelism?" (And who started it?) How do we change our world by changing the story we're telling ourselves? What counterintuitive benefit does Seth see in book blurbs? Over time, your improvement continues, but at a slower pace. How does Amazon and the “long tail” change the game? In The Dip, Seth Godin discusses the problem of things getting harder as we do more of them.His argument is that when you first start doing something, you see rapid improvement. How and why does Seth think the publishing industry is a mess? What strange lesson did Seth learn when he gave away 3000 of his own books?
