In a recent opinion piece for the Washington Post, journalist David Goodhart explains his idea that the world is divided between “somewhere” people and “anywhere” people.
Anywhere people, Goodhart writes,
“tend to be educated and mobile; they value openness, autonomy and individual self-realization. They tend to have careers rather than jobs and “achieved identities” based on academic and professional success.”
By contrast, somewhere people are
“more rooted and less well-educated; they tend to value security, familiarity and group attachments (national or local). Their sense of themselves is more likely to come from the place they come from and the local ways of life they are attached to, which means that they are more likely to be discomforted by rapid social change.”
So I want you to ask yourself. How do you feel right now?
Did you mentally put yourself into one of those categories in the past moment?
Did you think of other people who fit one of these two categories?
Did you maybe have a moment of insight, as if to say, “Wow, i never thought of it that way… but this could explain a lot.”
I’ve written before about the power of creating a syndrome or a disease as a way to get people to feel a moment of insight.
The classic example — the one marketer Rich Schefren likes to use — is ADHD.
Maybe you’ve gone through life, distracted and flaky, starting but never finishing projects, jumping from one thing to the next. You’re dissatisfied, but you can’t put your finger on what the problem really is.
And then somebody comes and tells you there’s a syndrome — a collection of symptoms — that has a medical name. Maybe this person also points out you have a few others symptoms, once you didn’t even notice, but which can be explained by this new diagnosis.
Suddenly, you feel enlightened. You have a new handle on the problems in your life. Hope swells up inside of you. Maybe all these different bad issues can be solved, you think, and at once!
So that’s one way to create insight. A new syndrome.
An extension, which can be equally as powerful, is to create a partition. To categorize, not just one group of people, but everybody, as either A or B.
That’s what’s going on with the somewhere people or anywhere people above. In more marketingy circles, there’s Rich Schefren’s partition of the world into business owners and opportunity seekers… or Andre Chaperon’s distinction between marketers who are chefs, and those who are merely cooks.
Maybe you haven’t heard me talk about insight before, so you’re wondering what the good of all this is. I’ll explain that in full detail in an upcoming book, all about the use of insight in marketing.
But if you want the situation in a nut — insight is a powerful feeling, just like desire. And just like desire, it can stimulate action.
Of course, just because something feels insightful, that doesn’t make it true.
I recently wrote about how I don’t believe in that biggest and most popular partition of the world — between introverts and extroverts. I feel the same about this somewhere/anywhere partition, even more so.
My point being, partitions, syndromes, and insight are powerful techniques of influence. We are all susceptible to them.
Well, almost all of us.
One large part of the population is what I call “insight-unaware” people. These people can be manipulated at will by techniques of insight. But a small part of the population is what I call “insight-aware.” And those people…
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