--- id: ins_worldview-led-marketing operator: Seth Godin operator_role: Author and marketing essayist; altMBA founder; Permission Marketing, Purple Cow, This Is Marketing source_url: https://seths.blog/ source_type: book source_title: "All Marketers Are Liars / Tell Stories" source_date: 2005-05-19 captured_date: 2026-05-05 domain: [pmm, strategy, marketing] lifecycle: [positioning, messaging-narrative, audience-segmentation] maturity: foundational artifact_class: framework score: { originality: 5, specificity: 4, evidence: 4, transferability: 5, source: 5 } tier: A related: [ins_smallest-viable-audience, ins_no-decision-is-the-real-competitor] raw_ref: raw/expert-content/experts/seth-godin.md --- # Don't try to change minds, find the worldview that already wants your story ## Claim Effective marketing does not persuade audiences out of their existing beliefs; it identifies the worldview (the set of beliefs about how the world works) the target group already holds and tells a story that resonates with that internal narrative. Marketing-as-persuasion fights against the audience's worldview; marketing-as-resonance rides it. ## Mechanism A worldview is a pre-existing internal model that determines which messages the audience finds plausible, which feel "true," and which they ignore. Stories that align with the worldview are processed as confirmation; stories that contradict it trigger reactance and are rejected. Trying to change a worldview through advertising is high-cost and slow. Identifying a target worldview, then crafting a product and story that align with it, costs less and converts faster, the audience does the persuasion work themselves because the story matches what they already believe. The implication for positioning is to start with worldview research (how does this group already think about the problem?) before writing any copy. ## Conditions Holds when: - The target audience has a recognisable worldview that can be researched (forum activity, podcasts they listen to, books they cite, language they use). - The product can be honestly positioned to align with that worldview without misrepresentation. - Distribution can target the worldview-holders specifically, not a general audience. Fails when: - The worldview is too narrow to support a viable business at the price point. - The audience has multiple competing worldviews and the chosen one alienates the others; the resulting story fragments the market. - The marketer projects their own worldview onto the audience instead of doing the research, the resulting "resonance" is to the marketer, not to the buyer. ## Evidence > "Godin's worldview concept holds that effective marketing begins by identifying people who share a specific worldview (a set of beliefs about how the world works) and then telling a story that resonates with that existing internal narrative, rather than trying to change minds through persuasion." ยท see `raw/expert-content/experts/seth-godin.md` line 19. ## Signals - Customer interviews surface a recurring worldview-language that shows up in unprompted answers. - Marketing copy is written *after* the worldview has been articulated, not before. - Conversion rate on worldview-aligned segments is multiples of the un-segmented baseline. ## Counter-evidence For genuinely new categories, no pre-existing worldview matches and the marketer must in fact create the worldview before the story can resonate. April Dunford's positioning work suggests that *category creation* is sometimes the right move, which is exactly worldview construction. Both can be true: Godin says don't try to change minds; Dunford says sometimes you have to invent the category first, they apply at different stages. ## Cross-references - `ins_smallest-viable-audience`, worldview-holders are how you find the smallest viable audience. - `ins_no-decision-is-the-real-competitor`, Dunford's "no decision" is itself a worldview problem (the buyer doesn't share the worldview that the problem is worth solving).