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Monday Morning Memo

Identity, Purpose and Adventure

March 17, 2014

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/62b61d6b-719c-4f33-acb4-4b51a49d3cd5/MMM140317-IdentityPurpose.mp3

People will direct their attention to whatever gives them a sense of identity, purpose and adventure.

You must always remember this when crafting advertising.

The fans of a sports team are the members of a club. Their team gives them identity, purpose and adventure. Political parties, too, give their members identity, purpose and adventure. Religious organizations, book clubs and Twitter feeds give their followers identity, purpose and adventure.

A grandmother adores her grandchildren because they give her identity… purpose… and adventure.

Do you know what a rock collector gets from his rock collection? Identity, purpose and adventure.

Each of us – every one of us – is on a treasure hunt. The differences between us are found primarily in the things we value. When a person doesn’t value what we value, we think a little less of them. They are obviously shallow, stupid, deceptive or evil.

Abraham Maslow believed a third of our society lives below the search for identity or above it. Those who live below the search are focused primarily on securing food, shelter and safety. This is their economic reality. Those who live above the search have a clear sense of identity and they know their purposes precisely. This is their emotional reality. Their adventures depend on nothing outside themselves.

Those who live below or above the search for identity are effectively immune to advertising. The first group can’t afford what you’re selling and the second group doesn’t care. These people are rarely prospective customers.

Fortunately for businesses everywhere, two thirds of us buy what we buy to remind ourselves – and tell the world around us – who we are. These two thirds of society are the backbone of the economy. We have needs that have not been met, hungers that have not been satisfied, dreams that have not been fulfilled.

Businesses exist to meet those needs, satisfy those hungers and fulfill those dreams.

We make and spend money primarily to discover who we are.

This would be sad
if it wasn’t so much fun.

Vie à l’économie.

Roy H. Williams



Tom Fischer
is a successful entrepreneur, world-class bourbon connoisseur, Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue model, butler, Oxford professor and – perhaps most importantly, a proud graduate of Wizard Academy. In a wide-ranging interview with the wide-ranging Rotbart, Tom, as proprietor of BourbonBlog.com, talks about the currently booming bourbon business, his strange and eclectic career, and his special connection to Gilligan’s Island – all at MondayMorningRadio.com

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Random Quote:

“My brother, Eddie, died on Christmas day of 2010. My fondest memories of him go way back to when I was in fifth grade and Eddie was in eighth. We played football on Curtiss Street with our neighborhood buddies.

Eddie could rifle a football faster and more accurately than anyone I knew. Most often, he had me go out for short passes and my hands and arms stung from catching the ball. Our team made short gains as we slowly worked our way toward the end zone, which was the Mulhalls’ driveway.

But once in a while, Eddie would wink at me and say, “Go long, Donnie.” Those were magic words. I would take off as fast as I could, past the parked white Edsel and the beat-up Mercury.

Eddie would drop the ball in my outstretched hands for a touchdown and my whole world felt perfectly wonderful.

Today, when I get emotionally down with chronic pain or a business deal is in serious jeopardy, I hear my brother back on Curtiss Street telling me, “Go long, Donnie.”

I listen to him and everything is the way it should be.”

- Don Kuhl, April 15, 2019

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