Where to Start with Seth Godin
Seth Godin is one of the most influential voices in modern marketing. He is the author of twenty-one bestselling books, including Purple Cow, Permission Marketing, Tribes, The Dip, and Linchpin. His daily blog, which he has published every single day since 2002, is one of the most popular in the world. Godin was inducted into the Marketing Hall of Fame in 2018, and his work has shaped how an entire generation thinks about marketing, leadership, and making things that matter. He founded altMBA, an intensive online leadership workshop, and Akimbo, a platform for online courses. His central message across all his work is consistent: do not try to reach everyone, find the people who care about what you make, serve them generously, and earn the privilege of their attention.
Start here
This Is Marketing
Seth Godin · 288 pages · 2018 · Easy
Themes: permission marketing, empathy, brand strategy, audience building, trust
The distillation of decades of marketing wisdom from one of the most influential thinkers in the field. Seth Godin wrote dozens of bestsellers and hundreds of blog posts before condensing his core philosophy into this single, accessible volume. The central argument is simple but powerful: marketing is not about grabbing attention or tricking people into buying. It is about making change happen by serving others.
Why Start Here
Godin has written over twenty books, and many of them are excellent. Purple Cow introduced the idea that being remarkable is the only marketing strategy that works. Permission Marketing laid the groundwork for email marketing and content marketing. Tribes explored the power of leading communities. But This Is Marketing is the book where Godin pulls all of these threads together into a unified philosophy.
Rather than focusing on one big idea, this book covers the full landscape of what it means to market with integrity. You get the smallest viable audience concept, the importance of tension and status, the role of trust, and a clear-eyed look at what marketing can and should be. If you only read one Godin book, this is the one that gives you the most complete picture of his thinking.
The writing is vintage Godin: short chapters, punchy sentences, and ideas that lodge in your brain. He challenges conventional thinking on every page, pushing you to reconsider assumptions about advertising, pricing, and competition. It is the kind of book that changes how you see the world, not just how you do your job.
What to Expect
A brisk 288 pages divided into short, digestible chapters. Godin’s style is more philosophical than tactical. Do not expect step-by-step instructions or detailed case studies. Instead, expect a book that reshapes your mental models about marketing. Many readers find they want to read it twice: once for the overview, and again to let the ideas sink in.