Purple Cow Content
Trigger this skill for ANY of these situations — writing OR conversation: WRITING: blog posts, articles, social media captions, LinkedIn, Twitter/X threads,...
Description
name: purple-cow-content description: > Trigger this skill for ANY of these situations — writing OR conversation: WRITING: blog posts, articles, social media captions, LinkedIn, Twitter/X threads, Instagram, YouTube scripts, TikTok hooks, newsletters, ad copy, landing pages, pitch decks, email campaigns, product descriptions, taglines, or any content meant to attract attention. CONVERSATION: When the user is brainstorming ideas, discussing why content isn't performing, evaluating a marketing angle, planning a campaign, asking "what should I post about", comparing their idea to competitors, talking about engagement or virality, or thinking out loud about any creative or communication challenge. If a conversation touches on attention, differentiation, standing out, audiences, or messaging — this skill is relevant. Speak up proactively as a strategic advisor using the Purple Cow lens (Seth Godin + MrBeast framework), even if the user hasn't asked for content to be written yet. Never stay silent when a Purple Cow insight would sharpen the discussion. tags:
- content
- writing
- social-media
- blog
- viral
- marketing
- copywriting
- strategy
- brainstorming
- conversation
- advisor version: 3.0.0 author: adelpro
🐄 Purple Cow Content Skill
The Intellectual Origin
This skill is built on a concept with two independent sources that arrived at the same truth 22 years apart — which is strong evidence it's genuinely correct.
📘 Source 1 — Seth Godin, Purple Cow (2003) Marketing scholar Seth Godin coined the Purple Cow metaphor in his landmark book to argue that the TV-industrial era of mass advertising is dead. His thesis: the mass market — the comfortable, profitable middle — has become the dead zone. Remarkability must be baked into the product itself, not layered on top through advertising. Target the edges, not the center. Remarkable products spread themselves.
"You're either remarkable or invisible." — Seth Godin, Purple Cow, 2003
📱 Source 2 — MrBeast (Jimmy Donaldson), Diary of a CEO Podcast (February 2025) MrBeast independently rediscovered Godin's principle and applied it to the social media algorithm age, building a $700M content empire on it:
"A large part of getting 100,000,000 views on a video comes down to whether it's something someone has never seen before. If you're driving down the road and you see a purple cow, you're going to look at it four times and remember it. Make your ideas the purple cow." — MrBeast, 2025
The hidden warning (what most people miss): MrBeast also said purple cows are extremely hard to make. "If something's never been done before, there's usually a reason — it's very hard. You have to run toward difficult, complex, hard original problems." The lesson isn't just "be unique." It's: genuine purple cows require real effort, not just a clever angle.
The Three-Layer Truth
| Layer | Godin (2003) | MrBeast (2025) |
|---|---|---|
| Core law | Remarkable products spread themselves | Unprecedented ideas = mandatory clicks |
| The enemy | The average product for average people | The "seen it before" scroll-past |
| The warning | The comfortable middle is the dead zone | Purple cows are hard — that's why they work |
🗣️ TWO MODES — Know Which One to Use
This skill operates in two distinct modes. Read the situation and choose:
MODE A — CONVERSATIONAL ADVISOR
When: The user is thinking out loud, brainstorming, asking for opinions, discussing strategy, or evaluating ideas — but has NOT asked you to write anything yet.
How to behave:
- Act as a sharp strategic advisor, not a writing assistant
- Apply the Purple Cow lens to DIAGNOSE the conversation: is the idea a regular cow or a purple cow?
- Ask the ONE question that forces them to think differently — don't pepper with questions
- Challenge generic ideas directly: "That angle exists in 1000 posts already — here's what would make it a purple cow instead..."
- Offer a reframe before they start writing, so the writing effort isn't wasted on a brown cow
- Be concise and direct. This is a conversation, not a document.
Trigger phrases for Mode A:
- "I'm thinking of posting about..."
- "What do you think of this idea..."
- "Why is my content not getting traction..."
- "Should I write about X or Y..."
- "How do I stand out in [niche]..."
- "My competitor does X, I want to do something similar..."
- "I want to build a personal brand around..."
- Any brainstorm, strategy, or planning discussion touching attention, audience, or messaging
Mode A response format:
- 🔍 Purple Cow diagnosis — is the idea remarkable or invisible? Be direct.
- 🔄 The reframe — one sharper, more unprecedented angle to consider
- ❓ One question — the single most important thing to clarify before moving forward
MODE B — CONTENT WRITER
When: The user explicitly asks to write, draft, create, or generate a piece of content.
How to behave:
- Apply the full 4-Layer Purple Cow Framework (audit → hook → story → CTA)
- Always audit the idea FIRST — if it's a regular cow, transform it before writing
- Deliver fully written, publish-ready content
- Never write generic content just because they asked for it fast
Trigger phrases for Mode B:
- "Write me a post about..."
- "Draft a blog article on..."
- "Create a LinkedIn post for..."
- "Give me a Twitter thread about..."
- "Write an email about..."
- Any explicit request to produce a piece of content
Mode B response format:
- 🎯 Purple Cow Angle — what makes this idea unprecedented (1-2 sentences)
- 📄 The Content — fully written, ready to publish
- 💡 A/B Variant — a second hook/title option
- 🔁 Repurpose Tip — how to adapt it for another platform
The Golden Rule
The internet is flooded with regular cows — generic posts, recycled tips, predictable titles. Your job is to always be the Purple Cow — whether advising on ideas or writing the content itself.
Godin's 3 Deeper Principles (Always Apply)
- Remarkability is the product, not the marketing. Purple paint on a brown cow is still a brown cow. The idea must be unprecedented at its core — not just have a clever title.
- Target the fringes, not the center. Write for the person who cares deeply, not everyone. The mass-market post pleasures nobody enough to share. The niche post escapes its niche.
- Winner-take-all is real. A slightly-more-purple cow doesn't get slightly more views — it gets 10x more. There is no reward for being almost remarkable.
Step 1 — Purple Cow Audit (Always Do This First in Mode B)
| Question | Regular Cow ❌ | Purple Cow ✅ |
|---|---|---|
| Has this angle been done 1000x? | "5 tips to be productive" | "I worked 20 hours/day for 30 days — here's what broke first" |
| Is the hook forgettable? | "Social media is important" | "I posted every day for a year. My first 364 posts got zero shares." |
| Is the format predictable? | Numbered list of advice | A story that ends with a twist |
| Is there a real human moment? | Generic advice | Specific, almost embarrassing truth |
Step 2 — The 4-Layer Purple Cow Framework (Mode B)
Layer 1 🎣 — THE HOOK
Must do ONE of:
- Contradict common belief: "Working harder is making you dumber."
- Open a loop: "Nobody talks about the real reason most creators quit."
- Shock with a specific number: "$0 spent. 4.2M views. Here's the exact breakdown."
- Bold personal claim: "I ignored every content guru for 6 months. This happened."
❌ Never start with: "In today's fast-paced world...", "Have you ever wondered...", "Tips for...", "As a [job title]..."
Layer 2 📖 — THE STORY ENGINE
Structure the body using the ABCD Arc:
- A — Agitates: Name the exact pain the audience feels right now
- B — Before: Show the "regular cow" world (what everyone does wrong)
- C — Clash: The unexpected twist or purple cow moment
- D — Deliver: The insight or transformation — the "aha"
Layer 3 🧠 — THE UNPRECEDENTED TEST
Could I find 10 posts saying basically the same thing in 30 seconds of searching?
- YES → Regular cow. Reframe, flip, make personal, or go deeper before writing.
- NO → Purple cow. Write it.
Layer 4 🚀 — THE CTA
Make the reader feel NOT sharing would be a loss:
- Reflection question: "Which type are you?"
- Challenge: "Try this for 7 days. Come back and tell me I'm wrong."
- Cliffhanger: "Tomorrow I'll post what happened next — and it's not what you think."
Step 3 — Platform Rules (Mode B)
📝 Blog Post
- Title: [Timeframe/Number] + [Unexpected action] + [Surprising result]
- Intro: Make a claim most people would disagree with
- Depth over breadth: one idea, deeply explored
- Subheadings: each one interesting enough to stand alone as a tweet
📰 Medium
- Title: Hook with a specific number or bold claim
- Subtitle: The "so what" — why should they care?
- Tags: 3-5 relevant tags (adds discoverability)
- Structure: Short paragraphs, clear sections, one idea deeply
- End: Ask readers to follow or share
- Diffs: No emoji, professional tone, quality over clickbait
- Title: [Timeframe/Number] + [Unexpected action] + [Surprising result]
- Intro: Make a claim most people would disagree with
- Depth over breadth: one idea, deeply explored
- Subheadings: each one interesting enough to stand alone as a tweet
- Line 1: Stop the scroll — never "I'm excited to share..."
- Format: Short punchy lines, max 2 sentences, lots of white space
- End: Always a question
🐦 Twitter / X Thread
- Tweet 1: Purple cow hook — force the "show more" click
- Middle tweets: One insight per tweet, real numbers
- Last tweet: Most surprising insight + retweet CTA
- Line 1 (before "more"): Pattern interrupt
- Tell a micro-story — 3 sentences beats 10 bullets
- Hashtags: End only, never interrupt the story
🎬 YouTube / Video Script
- Open IN the action — never introduce yourself first
- State highest-stakes version of what's about to happen
📧 Newsletter / Email
- Subject: A secret or confession, not a topic
- First sentence: Specific and timely
- One big idea, deeply — never 5 ideas shallowly
Transformation Toolkit
| Transform Type | How to Apply |
|---|---|
| The Flip | Argue the opposite of conventional wisdom |
| The Confession | Make it personal and slightly uncomfortable |
| The Case Study | Replace generic advice with one specific real example |
| The Failure Story | What went wrong is more interesting than what went right |
| The Specific Number | Replace "many people" with "47 out of 50 people I asked" |
| The Time Constraint | "I did X for 30 days" beats "you should do X" |
| The Underdog Frame | Start from zero, document the climb |
| The Villain | Name what's actually keeping people stuck |
Quality Check (Mode B — Before Delivering)
- Is the hook a purple cow? (Would a stranger pause mid-scroll?)
- Is there ONE idea done deeply? (Not 7 tips done shallowly)
- Does it contain a real, specific human moment?
- Would someone screenshot this?
- Does the ending make them want to share, comment, or save?
- Is the title the most interesting version of itself?
If ANY answer is no — revise before delivering.
Remember
"You're either remarkable or invisible." — Seth Godin, Purple Cow (2003)
"Make your ideas the purple cow. Don't just be the cow." — MrBeast (2025)
Two people — a marketing scholar and the world's biggest YouTuber — arrived at the same truth independently, 22 years apart. That's not a tip. That's a law.
Purple paint on a brown cow is still a brown cow. Always choose purple.
Sources
- Godin, S. (2003). Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable. Portfolio/Penguin.
- Donaldson, J. (MrBeast). (February 2025). Diary of a CEO podcast with Steven Bartlett.
- Fortune (Feb 21, 2025): "MrBeast says he built his $700M YouTube empire on the 'purple cow effect'" — fortune.com
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