Don't Miss a Thing
Free Updates by Email

Enter your email address

preview

powered by FeedBlitz

RSS Feeds





Facebook: Seth's Facebook
Twitter: @thisissethsblog

Search

Google
WWW SETH'S BLOG

SETH'S BOOKS

THE DIP BLOG by Seth Godin




All Marketers Are Liars Blog




Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2003

« Magically delicious | Blog Home | Let's put on a show »

Angry people are different

AngrycurveAngry people are different from other people. They are not just an inch or two along some curve. Instead, there's a gap in the curve, a vertical chasm, separating the angry from everyone else.

You may encounter angry prospects (angry before you even got there) or angry customers or angry regulators or even angry employees. They're similar to each other but different from the rest of us.

It's tempting to treat an angry person just like a typical person, just... angrier. This is probably a mistake, because anger brings its own reality along with it. An angry customer isn't just a little less valuable than a non-angry customer. In fact, she's on a curve all her own.

I have two suggestions for dealing with angry folks:

  1. Sometimes, you can just avoid them. You can choose not to work with angry people. Just move on. There are plenty of non-angry people out there.
  2. You can acknowledge the anger and understand that until you make the anger go away, all responses are going to be off the charts and completely useless to you. The opportunity in working with an angry person is that you can somehow turn that angry person into a non-angry one... and from there, move them up the curve to a relationship you both value. The mistake marketers make all the time is that we believe that moving the person up the curve is the next step. It's not. No one moves while they're angry.

"I'm never coming back to this restaurant again!" is angry.
"Our special next week is lasagna..." isn't going to do the trick as a response.

"I'm angry that my candidate didn't win the primary,"
so, "Consider my health plan," isn't going to work.

"You cancelled my flight!" is angry, thus...
"That's our policy sir, read the ticket," is obviously a lousy marketing ploy.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451b31569e200e5529d04158834

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Angry people are different:

» March of the Trolls from TOONE GUITARS
As an adamant advocate of freedom of speech, I've had to rethink my position regarding censorship recently, in reaction to comments left by one or two angry visitors. Interestingly, their anger was not provoked by anything I've written — discussing [Read More]

» Angry People are Different from Doug Wagner @ Sunwapta
Seth Godin raises an interesting point in his post. Dealing with an angry person can be an opportunitity or a drain on your business. His point is quite valid though, unless you can deal with the anger, you cannot move [Read More]

» Marketing Tip For the Rude or Angry Driver from Bob Poole's Water Cooler Hangout
Here’s a tip for business owners who have their company name on their vehicles – make sure whoever drives them understands that how they act on the road creates the perception people have of your business. [Read More]

» Follow the thread of anger from Fresh Eyes
Avoid angry people says Seth Godin in a recent post, "Angry people are different." It's not the only solution he suggests, but a primary one. The question you must ask: Did you have anything to do with creating that anger? [Read More]

« Magically delicious | Blog Home | Let's put on a show »