What you are about to read is an excerpt from Category Pirates, the authority newsletter on category creation & category design.
100 years ago, The Campbell’s Soup Company had a breakthrough.
For 30 years, the business sold little else besides produce, canned tomatoes, vegetables, jellies, condiments, minced meats, and of course, soups. Business was good, but there was nothing “radically different” about these products. Canning had been widely accepted as a method for sealing food since the early 1800s, and even when pasteurization was invented in 1864, fresh foods were difficult products to scale. …
One of the most common questions writers ask is, “Where should I be writing and publishing online?”
Most people don’t know that 50 Shades of Grey, one of the best-selling novels of all time (it pains me to write that sentence) started on a little-known internet forum called http://www.fanfiction.net. Or that The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, the orange book that dominated every bookstore from 2016 to 2020, started as a viral blog post. Or that The Martian, the sci-fi novel by Andy Weir that went on to sell 3 million copies, get adapted into a film, and…
Every writer should also be a ghostwriter.
In fact, the few times ghostwriting ever came up in class, it was quickly equated to “selling your soul.” Some even went so far as to say that ghostwriting was “unethical.”
It wasn’t until I fell into the world of ghostwriting that I realized how wholeheartedly I disagreed with that perspective. The first guy I ever ghostwrote for reached out after reading a handful of my answers on Quora. …
Category design is the strategy for dealing with the “winner take all” reality that has taken hold in business.
Only 19 percent of Fortune’s 100 fast-growing companies are category designers. And yet, they captured 51 percent (of the prior three years cumulative) of the revenue growth, and 80 percent (of the prior three years cumulative) of the market capitalization.
The Category Design Scorecard will tell you.
We created this scorecard after reviewing companies from the Fortune 100 Fastest-Growing Companies list and analyzing their 10Ks, Annual Reports, Investor Presentations, and Investor Relations websites.
Companies were scored in five key areas on…
This is an excerpt from our Wednesday newsletter, Category Pirates.
Every company talks about themselves to multiple audiences via several functions:
With the advent of marketing mix modeling and multi-touch attribution, marketing is the furthest along in terms of using analytics to optimize its return on investment. …
Today, I want to talk about how to never run out of ideas.
Because too often I hear writers say things like, “I don’t know what to write about” or “I feel like I’ve already written about that topic.” But the truth is, once you understand how idea generation works for creators on the Internet, you should NEVER have the problem of “running out of ideas.
You should be like me, where you have an iPhone Notes folder overflowing with so many ideas you can’t fall asleep at night because of the anxiety it gives you thinking about how you…
How do you get the words flowing?
It helps to hear how others before you did it.
One of the reasons I am such a big believer in the Ship 30 for 30 daily writing challenge is because, like all these writers, they preached the importance of good habits, consistency, and getting on with writing (instead of *thinking* about writing). I firmly believe it’s the act of writing that makes you a better writer, and nothing more.
Here’s what the pros have to say about it:
— Mark Twain
— Stephen King
I tweeted this recently and it’s been on my mind since:
My first year of high school sucked.
I didn’t have a group of friends. I sat by myself every day at the one lunch table nobody else sat at. I didn’t talk to anyone during or between classes. And I spent every Friday alone in my bedroom, eating takeout Chinese food and playing World of Warcraft.
I had a hard time learning how to skate. I kept falling on my face, and asked my dad repeatedly if I could quit (he said no, and I went on to play hockey for almost 15 years).
My first year playing classical piano…
There are two paths for making money as a writer.
- Sell your expertise per hour (service).
- Sell your expertise per asset (product).
If you go the service route, your revenue streams become things like selling content marketing services, ghostwriting, building a business that provides writing, editing, or marketing services, consulting, and so on.
If you go the product route, your revenue streams become things like selling books, courses, newsletters, journals, physical products, digital downloads, and so on.
The benefit of selling your expertise per hour (providing a service) is that it is 10x easier to start generating revenue…