Don't Miss a Thing
Free Updates by Email

Enter your email address

preview

powered by FeedBlitz

RSS Feeds

Share |
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

« How far away is your future? | Blog Home | Put a name on it »

It's not the rats you need to worry about

If you want to know if a ship is going to sink, watch what the richest passengers do.

iTunes and file sharing killed Tower Records. The key symptom: the best customers switched. Of course people who were buying 200 records a year would switch. They had the most incentive. The alternatives were cheaper and faster mostly for the heavy users.

Amazon and the Kindle have killed the bookstore. Why? Because people who buy 100 or 300 books a year are gone forever. The typical American buys just one book a year for pleasure. Those people are meaningless to a bookstore. It's the heavy users that matter, and now officially, as 2009 ends, they have abandoned the bookstore. It's over.

When law firms started switching to fax machines, Fedex realized that the cash cow part of their business (100 or 1000 or more envelopes per firm per day) was over and switched fast to packages. Good for them.

If your ship is sinking, get out now. By the time the rats start packing, it's way too late.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451b31569e2012875f7df40970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference It's not the rats you need to worry about:

» Amazon ha matado a la librería: Si el barco se hunde, lo sabes por los pasajeros de primera clase, no por las ratas [en] from meneame.net
El momento en que sabes que un barco se hunde no es viendo cuándo lo abandonan las ratas, sino cuándo lo hacen los pasajeros de primera clase. Las tiendas de música murieron cuando los mejores clientes, los... [Read More]

« How far away is your future? | Blog Home | Put a name on it »