In this mini-essay Kawasaki writes the following:
The future belongs to people who can spread ideas. Here are ten things to remember:
- Create a cause. A cause seizes the moral high ground and makes people's lives better.
- Love the cause. "Evangelist" is not a job title. It's a way of life. If you don't love a cause, you can't evangelize it.
- Look for agnostics, ignore atheists. It is too hard to convert people who deny your cause. Look for people who are supportive or neutral instead.
- Localize the pain. Never describe your case by using bull shiitake terms like "revolutionary" and "paradigm shifting". Instead, explain how it helps a person.
- Let people test drive the cause. Let people try your cause, take it home, download it, and then decide if it's right for them.
- Learn to give a demo. A person simply cannot evangelize a product if she cannot demo it.
- Provide a safe first step. Don't put up any big hurdles in the beginning of the process. The path to adopting a cause needs a slippery slope.
- Ignore pedigrees. Don't focus on the people with big titles and big reputations. Help anyone who can help you.
- Never tell a lie. Credibility is everything for an evangelist. Tell the truth-even if it hurts. Actually, especially if it hurts.
- Remember your friends. Be nice to the people on the way up because you might see them again on the way down.
While this was written for business and making money, I feel the Church can glean much from these 10 points (some points are more applicable to the Church than others).
I wonder before I riff on these ideas, what do you think? Can you see any think which the Church can glean from these 10 tips in regards to evangelism?