In the realm of math and physics, the opposite of a good idea is a bad idea.
1+1 is 2, not 3, and apples fall down when dislodged from trees, not up.
However, as Rory Sutherland argues in his book Alchemy, the world does not always conform to the rules of logic. Physics and math are important, but so is magic.
The example Rory uses in Alchemy's foreword illustrates his point:
“Imagine for a moment, you are sitting in the boardroom of a major global drinks company, and your job is to produce a new product that will rival the position of Coca-Cola as the world’s second most popular cold, non-alcoholic drink (after water).
What would you say? How would you respond?
Well, the first thing I would say is probably something like this: We need to produce a drink that tastes nicer than Coke, costs less than Coke, and that comes in a really big bottle so people get great value for money.
What I’m fairly sure nobody would say is this: Why don’t we try marketing a really expensive drink that comes in a tiny can and that tastes kind of disgusting?
Yet that’s exactly what one company did, and by doing so, they launched a soft drink brand that would indeed go on to be a worthy rival of Coca Cola. That drink was Red Bull.”
Psychology does not play by the same set of logical rules that physics does, yet so often in business and in life we assume that logic must be the solution to our problems.
As Robert Cialdini writes in his book Influence, “the principles of selling and behavior change are imbued with contradictions”. Below are a few more examples of such contradictions:
  • Advertising can get new customers, but so can staying quiet. Have you ever seen an ad for a country club?
  • A beautiful website can raise your brand’s status, but so can a boring one. Have you ever seen Berkshire Hathaway’s site?
  • Automated services can enhance a customer’s experience, but so can manual ones. Why do nice hotels still have doormen when they could open doors with automated sensors?
  • We like expensive things because they are expensive, and cheap things because they are cheap
Rory Sutherland summarizes the premise of his book as follows:
“While the modern world often turns its back on this kind of illogic, sometimes it is uniquely powerful. Alongside the inarguably valuable products of science and logic, there are also hundreds of seemingly irrational solutions to human problems just waiting to be discovered - if only we are brave enough to abandon conventional logic in the search for answers.”
The next time you find yourself certain that your logical idea is a good one, take a moment to consider what the opposite of your idea might look like.
You may just find yourself with another very good idea.
Really appreciate this line of thinking. Even not having a website today could be a legitimate business strategy, forcing people to speak with you on the phone. Which you could automate with A.I anyway.
Reminds me of blue ocean strategy that I referenced in post #450871.
You shouldn’t always just remove any ‘ingredient’ or part of the product, and there will be some items that are non-negotiable… but there are new rules to be written and new markets to unlock by doing something completely alien to both buyers & sellers in that existing market. Doing the opposite of what is expected is a legitimate concept, at least as a learning experiment. Businesses don’t take enough small bets in general and should experiment more.
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50 sats \ 1 reply \ @kr OP 31 Mar
yeah for sure, aiming to try out one of these “unconventional” strategies on SN soon 👀
also, Blue Ocean Strategy is a great book!
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👀
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That is an intriguing thought. It brings to mind the following... 😂

Here's how 2 guys from Alberta are selling $300K worth of canned air a year

Company started after entrepreneurs sold a Ziploc bag full of air on eBay for $168 US

Troy Paquette sets up a device to suck in fresh air from the Alberta mountains, which is then compressed into cans that are sold with a breathing apparatus, demonstrated by Moses Lam. (Louise Moquin/Radio-Canada)

... read more

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32 sats \ 1 reply \ @davidw 31 Mar
Now that is some fiat ‘mining’
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32 sats \ 0 replies \ @kr OP 31 Mar
😂
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Air from Alberta.... Oh yes
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Many a people are well-schooled enough to make a living, but not educated enough to seek a paradigm shift.
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Math and voodoo go together like peanut butter and chocolate.
"Baseball is 90 per cent mental. The other half is physical."
  • Yogi Berra
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Appreciate the thought you put into this. Juxtaposing the parallels between two books was interesting (might steal your method for my post next time), as was the examples from disparate fields.
I think breaking away from conventional logic may be difficult for some though. In my field, we are bound by data-driven empirically-proven best practices, so if my creative ideas veer too much towards left field, people might give feedback that I have deviated too much. Thus lies the tension between sticking to protocol and thinking out of the box. I am more than welcome to think out of the box, but my unorthodox ideas must lie inside another big box, it seems.
I think at the end of the day, self-awareness is crucial. If we know the V4V we bring to the table, we will naturally be fortified against naysayers.
Have you personally incorporated a wild idea that defied conventional logic but turned out for the best eventually?
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I drink neither coke nor red bull ;) , does it mean I should drink either of it? Both drinks taste like crap to me, and are not healthy. We are what we eat/drink. Well... That's not the point here:-)
Does it mean opposite is always a good complement to your idea? 💡
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