--- name: purple-cow-marketing description: "Create remarkable products and experiences that spread through word of mouth using Seth Godin's Purple Cow methodology Use when: **Launching a new product** and need it to stand out in a crowded market; **Differentiating your brand** from competitors who all look the same; **Escaping commodity status** where you compete only on price; **Planning a marketing strategy** with limited advertising budget; **Finding your remarkable angle** when \"good enough\" isn't working" license: MIT metadata: author: ClawFu version: 1.0.0 mcp-server: "@clawfu/mcp-skills" --- # Purple Cow Marketing - Stand Out or Be Invisible > Create remarkable products and experiences that spread through word of mouth using Seth Godin's Purple Cow methodology ## When to Use This Skill - **Launching a new product** and need it to stand out in a crowded market - **Differentiating your brand** from competitors who all look the same - **Escaping commodity status** where you compete only on price - **Planning a marketing strategy** with limited advertising budget - **Finding your remarkable angle** when "good enough" isn't working - **Targeting early adopters** who will spread the word - **Brainstorming product innovations** that customers will talk about ## Methodology Foundation | Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Source** | Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable (2003) | | **Expert** | Seth Godin - Marketing pioneer, bestselling author of 20+ books, founder of Yoyodyne and Squidoo | | **Core Principle** | "In a crowded marketplace, fitting in is failing. In a busy marketplace, not standing out is the same as being invisible. You're either remarkable or invisible." | ## What Claude Does vs What You Decide | Claude Does | You Decide | |-------------|------------| | Structures production workflow | Final creative direction | | Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices | | Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards | | Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions | | Generates script outlines | Final script approval | ## What This Skill Does This skill helps you escape the trap of average. Instead of trying to out-advertise competitors, you create something worth talking about—a Purple Cow. You'll learn to: 1. **Identify what's remarkable** - Find the Purple Cow in your product or create one 2. **Avoid the safe middle** - Go to the edges where remarkable lives 3. **Find your sneezers** - Target people who spread ideas, not the masses 4. **Design for word of mouth** - Make your remarkable thing easy to share 5. **Escape advertising dependency** - Let the product market itself The result: A product or service so remarkable that customers do your marketing for you. ## How to Use ### Prompt Examples ``` Analyze my product/service for Purple Cow potential. Here's what we offer: [description]. What's remarkable? What's invisible? How could we become a Purple Cow in our category? ``` ``` I'm in a crowded market where everyone looks the same. Help me find my Purple Cow using Godin's framework. My industry is [industry], my current differentiator is [if any]. ``` ``` Run the Purple Cow brainstorm checklist for my business: [description]. Give me 10 specific ideas for becoming remarkable. ``` ``` Who are the sneezers in my market? I sell [product] to [audience]. Help me identify the innovators and early adopters who will spread my idea. ``` ``` Critique this product launch through the Purple Cow lens. Is it remarkable enough to spread through word of mouth, or will we have to buy our way to awareness? ``` ## Instructions ### The Purple Cow Concept ``` ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ THE PURPLE COW PRINCIPLE │ ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ │ │ Brown Cow, Brown Cow, Brown Cow... PURPLE COW! │ │ │ │ ┌───────────┐ ┌───────────┐ ┌───────────┐ ┌───────────┐ │ │ │ Average │ │ Average │ │ Average │ │REMARKABLE │ │ │ │ (Ignored) │ │ (Ignored) │ │ (Ignored) │ │ (Noticed) │ │ │ └───────────┘ └───────────┘ └───────────┘ └───────────┘ │ │ │ │ The old P's: Product, Price, Place, Promotion, Packaging │ │ The new P: PURPLE COW (Remarkable) │ │ │ │ "If you're remarkable, it's likely that some people won't │ │ like you. Avoiding criticism is not a goal worth having." │ │ │ └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ ``` **The Core Truth**: Traditional advertising is broken. Consumers ignore ads, skip commercials, and suffer from information overload. The only way to cut through is to be remarkable—worth making a remark about. --- ### Step 1: Understand What "Remarkable" Really Means Remarkable = Worth making a remark about **Remarkable is NOT:** - Being weird for weird's sake - Being shocking or offensive - Being the cheapest - Having the most features - Being "different" without purpose **Remarkable IS:** - Solving a real problem in an unexpected way - Delighting customers so much they tell others - Standing out to the people who matter (your target) - Creating an experience worth sharing **The Remarkable Test:** | Question | If Yes | If No | |----------|--------|-------| | Would someone tell a friend about this? | ✓ Remarkable potential | Invisible | | Would a stranger stop and ask about it? | ✓ Remarkable potential | Invisible | | Does it make people say "Wow!" or "Huh, interesting"? | ✓ Remarkable potential | Invisible | | Is it worth taking a photo to share? | ✓ Remarkable potential | Invisible | | Would your customers miss it if it disappeared? | ✓ Remarkable | Commodity | --- ### Step 2: Go to the Edges **The Danger Zone**: The safe middle is where products go to die. "Good enough" is invisible. ``` THE EDGE SPECTRUM ←── EDGE ─────────── MIDDLE ─────────── EDGE ──→ Remarkable Safe/Invisible Remarkable (Risky) (Competing on price) (Risky) "In a world of too many choices, the safest thing is to be risky." ``` **Finding Your Edge:** | Dimension | Safe Middle (Invisible) | Edge Options (Remarkable) | |-----------|------------------------|---------------------------| | **Price** | Competitive | Free OR 10x more expensive | | **Features** | Industry standard | Radically simple OR incredibly comprehensive | | **Design** | Professional/expected | Wildly distinctive | | **Service** | Adequate | Outrageously personal OR fully self-service | | **Speed** | Same-day | Instant OR worth waiting for | | **Audience** | Everyone | Tiny niche obsessed with your thing | | **Personality** | Corporate neutral | Bold, opinionated, human | **Edge Exercise:** For each dimension, ask: "What would happen if we went to the extreme?" --- ### Step 3: Find Your Sneezers **The Adoption Curve Mistake**: Most companies market to the majority. By the time the majority cares, you're a commodity. ``` INNOVATION ADOPTION CURVE ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ │ │ █ │ │ ███ │ │ █████ ████████████████████████ │ │ ███████ ████████████████████████████████ │ │ █████████ ██████████████████████████████████████ │ │ │ │ INNOVATORS EARLY EARLY LATE LAGGARDS │ │ (2.5%) ADOPTERS MAJORITY MAJORITY (16%) │ │ (13.5%) (34%) (34%) │ │ │ │ ←─── TARGET THESE ───→ │ │ (They spread ideas) │ └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ ``` **Sneezers**: People who spread your idea like a virus. | Sneezer Type | Characteristics | Strategy | |--------------|-----------------|----------| | **Promiscuous Sneezers** | Tell everyone about everything, high volume, lower influence per share | Make sharing frictionless, give them content | | **Powerful Sneezers** | Selective, high credibility, fewer but more impactful recommendations | Create something worthy of their reputation | **Finding Sneezers:** 1. Who actively seeks out new things in your category? 2. Who do others ask for recommendations? 3. Who has a platform or audience? 4. Who has "otaku" (obsessive interest) in your space? --- ### Step 4: Find the Otaku **Otaku** (Japanese): An obsessive, all-consuming interest in something specific. People with otaku for your category: - Care deeply about details others ignore - Spend disproportionate time and money - Influence others in that niche - Actively seek the remarkable - Are forgiving of flaws if the remarkable part delivers **Your Job**: Find people with otaku for your category, then give them something worth obsessing about. **Examples of Otaku:** - Audiophiles (hi-fi equipment) - Sneakerheads (rare shoes) - Coffee aficionados (single-origin beans) - Mechanical keyboard enthusiasts - Craft beer geeks **Question**: Who obsesses about what you sell? What would make them lose their minds with excitement? --- ### Step 5: Design for Word of Mouth Your remarkable thing must be: | Requirement | Test Question | |-------------|---------------| | **Easy to explain** | Can someone describe it in one sentence? | | **Visible** | Can others see it, use it, experience it? | | **Worth the social risk** | Is recommending it worth their reputation? | | **Shareable** | Is there a natural moment to share? | | **Memorable** | Will they remember it tomorrow? Next week? | **Word-of-Mouth Design Checklist:** - [ ] One-sentence pitch that anyone can repeat - [ ] Visual element that's photo/screenshot worthy - [ ] Story hook that's fun to tell - [ ] Built-in reason to mention (surprise, delight, status) - [ ] No barriers to sharing (complicated name, hard to find, etc.) --- ### Step 6: The Purple Cow Creation Process ``` 1. IDENTIFY 2. EDGE 3. SNEEZERS What could be → Go extreme in → Who will remarkable? that dimension spread this? │ │ │ ▼ ▼ ▼ 4. DESIGN 5. TEST 6. RELEASE Make it easy → Does it pass → Let the to spread the tests? sneezers work ``` **Process Details:** **1. Identify**: What aspect of your product/service could be remarkable? - Audit everything you do - Look for the one thing you could be best at - Find the dimension that matters most to sneezers **2. Edge**: Go extreme in that dimension - Not 10% better—10x better or radically different - Accept you'll alienate some people - Double down, don't hedge **3. Sneezers**: Target the people who spread - Ignore the masses initially - Focus resources on innovators and early adopters - Give them reasons to talk **4. Design**: Make it spreadable - One-sentence pitch - Visual/shareable element - Remove friction **5. Test**: Does it pass the remarkable tests? - Would they tell a friend? - Would they miss it? - Is it genuinely worth remarking about? **6. Release**: Let word of mouth work - Seed with sneezers - Don't over-market - Listen and iterate --- ## Examples ### Example 1: Mailchimp's Early Growth **Situation**: Email marketing software in a crowded market (Constant Contact, AWeber, etc.). **Purple Cow Analysis:** **What was remarkable:** - Free tier for small lists (radical pricing) - Fun, irreverent brand voice (not corporate) - Chimp mascot and animations (visual distinctiveness) - "Send a friend a campaign" feature (built-in virality) **The Edge They Chose:** | Dimension | Competitors | Mailchimp | |-----------|-------------|-----------| | Price | Paid only | Free up to 2,000 subscribers | | Tone | Corporate, serious | Fun, weird, human | | Visual | Professional/boring | Quirky chimp, playful design | | Complexity | Feature-heavy | Simple, focused | **Who Were the Sneezers:** - Bloggers and small creators - Startup founders - Web designers recommending tools to clients **Why It Spread:** - Free to try = no barrier - Fun brand = fun to talk about - "Powered by Mailchimp" footer = visibility - High-fives after campaigns = shareable moment **Result**: From underdog to market leader, acquired by Intuit for $12B. --- ### Example 2: RXBAR's Transparent Packaging **Situation**: Protein bar market dominated by brands with confusing ingredient lists and health-washing marketing. **Purple Cow Analysis:** **What was remarkable:** - Ingredients listed directly on the front of the package - "No B.S." messaging - Simple, bold typography - Radical transparency in a category full of deception **The Edge They Chose:** | Dimension | Competitors | RXBAR | |-----------|-------------|-------| | Packaging | Marketing claims | Ingredient list as design | | Messaging | "Healthy" | "3 Egg Whites, 6 Almonds, 4 Cashews..." | | Complexity | 30+ ingredients | 5-6 real foods | | Position | Health brand | Honesty brand | **Who Were the Sneezers:** - CrossFit community (otaku for clean eating) - Fitness influencers tired of supplement BS - Whole Foods shoppers reading every label **Why It Spread:** - Visible on the shelf = instant differentiation - Easy to explain = "It just lists the ingredients on the front" - CrossFit community = tight-knit, influential sneezers - Aligned with values = worth the social capital to recommend **Result**: From $2M to $160M revenue in 5 years, acquired by Kellogg's for $600M. --- ### Example 3: Service Business Purple Cow **Situation**: A local accounting firm wanting to stand out from dozens of similar firms. **Conventional Approach (Invisible):** - Professional website with stock photos - "Trusted, experienced, reliable" messaging - Competitive pricing - Generic service offerings **Purple Cow Approach:** | Edge Option | The Remarkable Thing | |-------------|---------------------| | **Radical Transparency** | Publish all pricing online, guarantee quotes in 24 hours | | **Extreme Niche** | "Accountants for OnlyFans Creators" (real business) | | **Radical Service** | Tax returns done in 48 hours, or they're free | | **Personality** | "The accounting firm that actually replies to emails" | | **Specialization** | Only serve restaurants, know every deduction | **Implementation Example (Niche Strategy):** **Target**: E-commerce sellers on Shopify **Remarkable Elements:** - Direct Shopify integration (pulls data automatically) - E-commerce-specific tax optimization checklist - "Shopify Store Financial Health Report" (free lead magnet) - Community Slack for Shopify sellers - Case studies with real revenue numbers **Sneezers**: Shopify podcasters, e-commerce Facebook group admins, Shopify app developers **Why It Would Spread:** - Easy to explain: "They only do Shopify stores" - Visible expertise: Content specifically for e-commerce - Worth recommending: Saves money through specialized knowledge - Natural moment: Tax season conversations in communities --- ## Checklists & Templates ### Purple Cow Audit ```markdown ## Purple Cow Audit: [Product/Company] ### Current State Analysis **What we sell**: **Who we serve**: **Our current differentiator**: **Would customers miss us if we disappeared?** Yes / No / Unsure ### Remarkable Test - [ ] Would someone tell a friend about this? - [ ] Would a stranger stop and ask about it? - [ ] Does it make people say "Wow!" or "Huh, interesting"? - [ ] Is it worth taking a photo/screenshot to share? ### Edge Analysis | Dimension | Our Current Position | Edge Option 1 | Edge Option 2 | |-----------|---------------------|---------------|---------------| | Price | | | | | Features | | | | | Design | | | | | Service | | | | | Speed | | | | | Audience | | | | | Personality | | | | ### Sneezer Identification **Who has otaku for our category?** 1. 2. 3. **Where do they gather?** 1. 2. 3. **What would make them excited enough to share?** ### Purple Cow Candidates Based on this analysis, our Purple Cow could be: **Option 1**: [Edge + What's Remarkable] **Option 2**: [Edge + What's Remarkable] **Option 3**: [Edge + What's Remarkable] ### Selected Purple Cow **The remarkable thing we'll pursue**: **Why it will spread**: **Who will spread it**: **How we'll make it easy to share**: ``` ### Purple Cow Brainstorm (30 Questions) ```markdown ## Purple Cow Brainstorm: [Company/Product] ### Product/Service Questions 1. What if we charged 10x more? What would we deliver? Answer: 2. What if we charged nothing? How would we monetize? Answer: 3. What feature could we remove that competitors would never dare remove? Answer: 4. What could we do so well customers would tattoo our logo? Answer: 5. What could we be the world's best at? Answer: ### Customer Experience Questions 6. What would make customers take a photo and share it? Answer: 7. What story would customers tell at dinner parties? Answer: 8. What would make the first 5 seconds unforgettable? Answer: 9. How could we make customers feel like VIPs? Answer: 10. What would make them say "I've never seen that before"? Answer: ### Market Position Questions 11. What category could we create where we're #1? Answer: 12. What's the opposite of our competitors? Answer: 13. What if we could only reach 100 customers ever? Answer: 14. What big problem does everyone ignore? Answer: 15. What audience does everyone overlook? Answer: ### Top 3 Ideas from Brainstorm 1. 2. 3. ``` ### Sneezer Strategy Template ```markdown ## Sneezer Strategy: [Product/Campaign] ### Sneezer Identification **Primary Sneezers (Powerful - selective, high credibility)** | Name/Type | Platform | Audience Size | Relevance | |-----------|----------|---------------|-----------| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | **Secondary Sneezers (Promiscuous - share everything)** | Community/Group | Size | Activity Level | |-----------------|------|----------------| | | | | | | | | | | | | ### What Would Make Them Share? **For Powerful Sneezers:** - What's worth their reputation? - What makes them look smart/connected? - What aligns with their values? **For Promiscuous Sneezers:** - What's easy to share? - What gets engagement? - What's trending/timely? ### Shareable Assets | Asset | Format | Sneezer Type | Where It Spreads | |-------|--------|--------------|------------------| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ### Seeding Plan **Week 1-2**: [Who we contact, what we share] **Week 3-4**: [Follow-up, additional outreach] **Ongoing**: [How we maintain sneezer relationships] ### Success Metrics - Word-of-mouth mentions: - Referral traffic: - Organic shares: - Sneezer coverage: ``` --- ## Skill Boundaries ### What This Skill Does Well - Structuring audio production workflows - Providing technical guidance - Creating quality checklists - Suggesting creative approaches ### What This Skill Cannot Do - Replace audio engineering expertise - Make subjective creative decisions - Access or edit audio files directly - Guarantee commercial success ## References - **Book**: Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable by Seth Godin (2003) - **Related Works**: All Marketers Are Liars, This Is Marketing, Permission Marketing - **Concepts**: Sneezers, Ideavirus, Otaku, Adoption Curve - **Source**: `sources/books/godin-purple-cow.md` ## Related Skills - **positioning-dunford** - Position your Purple Cow effectively - **category-design** - Create a new category for your remarkable product - **storytelling-storybrand** - Tell the story of your Purple Cow - **grand-slam-offers** - Design offers so good they're remarkable - **content-strategy** - Spread your Purple Cow through content