Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real.
Find resources that bring your message—and your business—to life.

By Vicky Sidler | Published 1 March 2026 at 12:00 GMT+2
If you have ever paid for an advert, refreshed your dashboard, and waited for the flood of inquiries that never quite arrived, you have already experienced the gap between noise and impact.
For years, marketing rewarded whoever could shout the loudest, repeat the most, and occupy the most billboards. That era made sense when attention was scarce and options were limited. Today, attention is fragmented, choice is infinite, and shouting mostly blends into background static.
In This Is Marketing, Seth Godin argues that the real work of marketing is no longer about volume.
It is about empathy.
According to Godin, effective marketing is the generous act of helping someone solve a problem that matters to them, not a problem that happens to increase your quarterly revenue target.
That shift sounds subtle. It is not.
Marketing is not about shouting at everyone. It is about serving someone specific.
Choose the smallest viable market instead of trying to please the masses.
People buy transformation, not products.
Story and status drive decisions more than features.
Build permission and trust instead of chasing attention.
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
Why Worldview Matters More Than Demographics:
Tension and the Decision to Act:
The Responsibility of the Marketer:
1. Stop Targeting Everyone: Why Clarity Beats Volume
2. Content Marketing Strategy Framework Every Small Biz Needs
3. Badass Business Book Club – StoryBrand 2.0 Review
4. Badass Business Book Club – Duct Tape Marketing Review
5. Badass Business Book Club – The 1-Page Marketing Plan Review
Frequently Asked Questions About Seth Godin’s This Is Marketing
1. What is the main idea of This Is Marketing by Seth Godin?
2. What does “smallest viable market” actually mean?
3. How do I choose a niche without losing potential customers?
4. What is the difference between demographics and psychographics in marketing?
5. Why does Seth Godin say people buy transformation, not products?
6. What is permission marketing and why does it matter?
7. How can a small business apply This Is Marketing without a big budget?
8. What does “remarkable” mean in practical terms for a service business?
9. Is This Is Marketing only relevant for big brands?
10. What is the first step I should take after reading This Is Marketing?
Marketing used to follow what I call the fizzy drink formula. Put your brand everywhere, repeat it often enough, and assume familiarity will eventually lead to sales.
That approach relied on interruption and saturation. Godin’s view is that interruption is now expensive, exhausting, and increasingly ineffective, because people have learned to tune it out with remarkable skill.
The alternative is quieter and far more strategic.
Instead of asking how to get more customers for your product, you begin by asking what product you should build for the customers you most want to serve. That is a reversal many small businesses resist, because it requires saying no to large groups of people who might theoretically buy from you.
Godin introduces the idea of the Smallest Viable Market, which is simply the smallest group of people who urgently want what you make and are willing to spread the word about it. Choosing this group feels risky at first, because narrowing your focus appears to shrink your opportunity.
In practice, it sharpens your relevance.
When you try to appeal to everyone, you drift toward the safe middle. Safe usually means forgettable. When you choose a defined group, you gain the freedom to speak directly to their worldview, frustrations, and ambitions. You stop being a generic option and become a meaningful solution.
A simple way to think about it is this:
My product is for people who believe something specific.
I focus on people who want a particular result.
I promise that engaging with what I create will help them achieve a defined transformation.
Specificity is not about excluding others out of spite. It is about designing something remarkable for someone who cannot wait to find it.
Many business owners still describe their audience using surface-level traits such as age, income, or location. While these details have some value, they rarely explain behavior. Two people of the same age and income can make wildly different decisions because they see the world differently.
Godin highlights the importance of psychographics, which is simply a way of describing what people value, fear, and aspire to.
People buy in ways that protect or elevate their status within their group. Status does not always mean dominance or wealth. For some, status is belonging. For others, it is independence, competence, or respect.
When your marketing acknowledges that inner narrative, it becomes far more persuasive. You are no longer selling a service. You are offering a shift in how someone sees themselves and how they are seen by others.
As a StoryBrand Certified Guide and Duct Tape Marketing Consultant, I often remind clients that clarity about transformation is more powerful than a list of features. If your message does not clearly describe the change you create, your audience is left to guess, and guessing rarely leads to buying.
People change when the tension between where they are and where they want to be becomes uncomfortable enough. Tension is not panic. It is the quiet recognition that the current situation is no longer sufficient.
Your role as a marketer is to name that tension honestly and offer a credible path forward. If you skip the problem and rush to the solution, you remove the emotional energy that drives action. When you acknowledge the struggle and articulate a hopeful outcome, you create movement.
Stories work because they mirror this journey. A story begins with a challenge, introduces a guide, and ends with resolution. Marketing that follows this structure feels natural because it reflects how we already process change.
One of the most practical ideas in the book is permission marketing. Permission means someone has chosen to hear from you. They have subscribed, followed, or joined because they expect value.
Buying attention through advertising can generate short-term results, and in many cases it should form part of your strategy. However, rented attention disappears the moment you stop paying. Owned attention, built through trust and consistency, compounds over time.
If you stopped sending your weekly email and people noticed, you have built permission. If your audience forwards your content to colleagues, you have built relevance. These are assets far more stable than a temporary spike in clicks.
Godin’s well-known idea of the Purple Cow suggests that in a crowded marketplace, being average is invisible. "Remarkable" does not mean outrageous or extreme. It means worth talking about.
For a service business, remarkability might look like a clearly defined process, an unusually transparent pricing model, or a guarantee that reduces risk. The key is that it must be designed into the offer from the beginning, not added as decorative copy at the end.
Perhaps the most overlooked theme in This Is Marketing is responsibility. Marketing is not inherently manipulative. It becomes manipulative when it prioritizes the company’s short-term gain over the customer’s genuine change.
When used well, marketing connects people to solutions that improve their lives, their businesses, and their communities. That is not hype. It is leadership.
For small business owners, the practical takeaway is straightforward. Stop trying to be slightly interesting to everyone. Start being deeply useful to someone. Define your smallest viable market. Understand their worldview. Offer a clear transformation. Show up consistently.
If you would like help articulating that transformation in one sharp sentence, start with the free 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
Clarity is not loud, but it travels further than noise ever could.
If the idea of the smallest viable market made you slightly uncomfortable, this article shows why that discomfort is usually a sign you are on the right track. It walks through how narrowing your focus actually increases growth, rather than shrinking it.
Godin gives the philosophy. This post gives you a simple framework to turn empathy and permission into a practical content plan that works even with a small team and limited budget.
If the idea that people buy transformation rather than features resonated, the StoryBrand review shows you exactly how to communicate that transformation in clear, customer-focused language.
This review connects customer-centric thinking to a repeatable small business system, helping you move from big ideas about empathy to consistent, integrated action.
If you understand the philosophy but want everything mapped out simply, this review shows how to compress your strategy into a one-page roadmap you can actually use.
The core idea is that marketing is not about grabbing attention from everyone. It is about helping a specific group of people solve a problem that matters to them. Instead of pushing products, you create change for a clearly defined audience and build trust over time.
The smallest viable market is the smallest group of people who urgently want what you offer and are likely to spread the word about it. It means choosing focus over mass appeal, so you can design your product and message specifically for them instead of watering it down for everyone.
Start by identifying the group that gets the best results from your work or values what you do most. Focusing on them does not permanently exclude others. It strengthens your positioning so that when others see your clarity, they are more likely to trust you as well.
Demographics describe surface traits such as age, income, or location. Psychographics describe beliefs, values, fears, and aspirations. Psychographics are often more powerful because people make decisions based on how they see themselves and what they want to become.
Because most purchases are tied to change. A customer is not buying coaching, software, or consulting in isolation. They are buying confidence, growth, stability, recognition, or peace of mind. The product is simply the vehicle for that transformation.
Permission marketing means communicating with people who have chosen to hear from you. They subscribe, follow, or opt in because they expect value. This builds a long term asset based on trust, instead of relying only on paid advertising that stops working when you stop paying.
You can apply it by narrowing your focus, clarifying your message, and consistently serving your chosen audience with helpful content. It requires more thought than money. Clear positioning and steady communication often outperform expensive campaigns aimed at everyone.
Remarkable means worth talking about. For a service business, that could be a clearly defined process, a strong guarantee, a unique specialisation, or an experience clients naturally share with others. It is built into the offer itself, not added later as clever wording.
No. In many ways, it is more useful for small businesses. Smaller teams can focus faster, adjust more easily, and build close relationships with a niche. The principles of empathy, clarity, and trust are often easier to implement at a smaller scale.
Start by clearly answering two questions. Who is this for, and what change do I create for them? If you cannot answer those in one simple sentence, refine your message first. A tool like the 5-Minute Marketing Fix can help you clarify that before you invest time or money in tactics.

Created with clarity (and coffee)