Categories: All - pain - excellence - success - perseverance

by Mindomo Team 4 years ago

396

The Dip by Seth Godin

Achieving greatness requires enduring and leveraging challenging phases, referred to as the Dip. To stand out, one must not just survive these challenges but use them to create exceptional work that garners attention and recommendation.

The Dip by Seth Godin

The Dip by Seth Godin

The Five Big Ideas

  1. “To be a superstar, you must do something exceptional. Not just survive the Dip, but use the Dip as an opportunity to create something so extraordinary that people can’t help but talk about it, recommend it, and, yes, choose it.”
  2. “The next time you catch yourself being average when you feel like quitting, realize that you have only two good choices: Quit or be exceptional. Average is for losers.”
  3. “Winners understand that taking that pain now prevents a lot more pain later.”
  4. “The decision to quit or not is a simple evaluation: Is the pain of the Dip worth the benefit of the light at the end of the tunnel?”
  5. Quitting as a short-term strategy is a bad idea. Quitting for the long term is an excellent idea because it frees you up to excel at something else.


“Quitting when you hit the Dip is a bad idea. If the journey you started was worth doing, then quitting when you hit the Dip just wastes the time you’ve already invested. Quit in the Dip often enough and you’ll find yourself becoming a serial quitter, starting many things but accomplishing little.”

“If you can’t make it through the Dip, don’t start.”

“If you want to be a superstar, then you need to find a field with a steep Dip—a barrier between those who try and those who succeed. And you’ve got to get through that Dip to the other side.”

“If you can get through the Dip, if you can keep going when the system is expecting you to stop, you will achieve extraordinary results.”

“To be a superstar, you must do something exceptional. Not just survive the Dip, but use the Dip as an opportunity to create something so extraordinary that people can’t help but talk about it, recommend it, and, yes, choose it.”

“The next time you catch yourself being average when you feel like quitting, realize that you have only two good choices: Quit or be exceptional. Average is for losers.”

“Selling is about a transference of emotion, not a presentation of facts. If it were just a presentation of facts, then a PDF flyer or a Web site would be sufficient to make the phone ring.”

“If you’re not able to get through the Dip in an exceptional way, you must quit. And quit right now.”

“Winners understand that taking that pain now prevents a lot more pain later.”

“The decision to quit or not is a simple evaluation: Is the pain of the Dip worth the benefit of the light at the end of the tunnel?”

“If your job is a Cul-de-Sac, you have to quit or accept the fact that your career is over.”

“Strategic quitting is a conscious decision you make based on the choices that are available to you. If you realize you’re at a dead end compared with what you could be investing in, quitting is not only a reasonable choice, it’s a smart one.”

“Quitting is better than coping because quitting frees you up to excel at something else.”

“Actually, quitting as a short-term strategy is a bad idea. Quitting for the long term is an excellent idea.”

“It’s human nature to quit when it hurts. But it’s that reflex that creates scarcity.”

“Knowing that you’re facing a Dip is the first step in getting through it.”

“It’s not enough to survive your way through this Dip. You get what you deserve when you embrace the Dip and treat it like the opportunity that it really is.”

“In a competitive world, adversity is your ally. The harder it gets, the better chance you have of insulating yourself from the competition. If that adversity also causes you to quit, though, it’s all for nothing.”

“The Cul-de-Sac is boring, the Cliff is exciting (for a while), but neither gets you through the Dip and both lead to failure.”

“The Dip creates scarcity; scarcity creates value.”

“At the beginning, when you first start something, it’s fun. Over the next few days and weeks, the rapid learning you experience keeps you going. Whatever your new thing is, it’s easy to stay engaged in it. And then the Dip happens. The Dip is the long slog between starting and mastery. A long slog that’s actually a shortcut, because it gets you where you want to go faster than any other path.”

“Almost everything in life worth doing is controlled by the Dip.”

“Just about everything you learned in school about life is wrong, but the wrongest thing might very well be this: Being well rounded is the secret to success.”

“People settle for good enough instead of best in the world.”

“With limited time or opportunity to experiment, we intentionally narrow our choices to those at the top.”

“Quit the wrong stuff. Stick with the right stuff. Have the guts to do one or the other.”

“Extraordinary benefits accrue to the tiny minority of people who are able to push just a tiny bit longer than most.”

“Winners quit all the time. They just quit the right stuff at the right time.”