---
name: permission-marketing
description: "Build marketing that people actually want using Seth Godin's Permission Marketing methodology—earn attention instead of demanding it, turning strangers into friends and friends into customers. Use when: **Build an email list** that's engaged and valuable; **Design lead magnets** that earn real permission; **Create content strategy** based on earning attention; **Evaluate marketing tactics** for permission vs. interruption; **Improve email marketing** by increasing anticipation and relevance"
license: MIT
metadata:
  author: ClawFu
  version: 1.0.0
  mcp-server: "@clawfu/mcp-skills"
---

# Permission Marketing

> Build marketing that people actually want using Seth Godin's Permission Marketing methodology—earn attention instead of demanding it, turning strangers into friends and friends into customers.

## When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when you need to:

- **Build an email list** that's engaged and valuable
- **Design lead magnets** that earn real permission
- **Create content strategy** based on earning attention
- **Evaluate marketing tactics** for permission vs. interruption
- **Improve email marketing** by increasing anticipation and relevance
- **Build audience before product** for new ventures
- **Audit existing marketing** for permission-based opportunities
- **Train teams** on ethical, effective marketing principles

This skill is particularly valuable for:
- Email marketers wanting higher engagement
- Content marketers building audience
- Founders building pre-launch audiences
- Marketers frustrated with declining ad effectiveness
- Anyone who wants marketing that feels good to create AND receive

---

## Methodology Foundation

**Source:** Seth Godin - *Permission Marketing: Turning Strangers into Friends and Friends into Customers* (1999) and *This is Marketing* (2018)

**Core Principle:** Permission Marketing is the privilege (not the right) of delivering anticipated, personal, and relevant messages to people who want to get them. You earn attention; you don't demand it.

> "If you didn't send out your emails tomorrow, would people contact you to find out what happened?"

---


## What Claude Does vs What You Decide

| Claude Does | You Decide |
|-------------|------------|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |

## What This Skill Does

When invoked, I will guide you through the Permission Marketing methodology:

1. **Diagnose your current marketing** - interruption vs. permission
2. **Design permission-earning strategies** that create real value exchange
3. **Build the permission ladder** from stranger to customer to advocate
4. **Create content and offers** that earn rather than demand attention
5. **Evaluate tactics** against the three requirements (anticipated, personal, relevant)
6. **Avoid permission pitfalls** that destroy trust

---

## How to Use

Provide information about your marketing challenge:

**Example prompts:**

- "How do I build an email list that people actually want to be on?"
- "Audit my current marketing for permission vs. interruption"
- "Design a lead magnet strategy using permission marketing"
- "Help me shift from interruption to permission marketing"
- "Create an email welcome sequence that builds permission"

**Information that helps:**

- Your current marketing channels and tactics
- Your target audience
- What value you can offer
- Current list size and engagement rates
- Business model and sales cycle

---

## Instructions

### Understanding the Core Contrast

#### Interruption Marketing (Old Way)

**Definition:** Buying access to attention by interrupting whatever the consumer is doing.

**Characteristics:**
- Demands attention
- One-way communication
- Volume-based (more impressions = more results)
- Declining effectiveness
- 98% rejection rate typical

**Examples:**
- TV commercials
- Banner ads
- Cold calls
- Spam email
- Pop-up ads

#### Permission Marketing (New Way)

**Definition:** Earning the privilege of delivering anticipated, personal, and relevant messages.

**Characteristics:**
- Earns attention
- Two-way relationship
- Depth-based (stronger permission = better results)
- Increasing effectiveness with time
- High engagement from those who opt in

**Examples:**
- Valued newsletters
- Requested content
- Opt-in email sequences
- Membership communities
- Podcast subscriptions

---

### The Three Requirements

Every piece of permission marketing must be:

| Requirement | Definition | Test Question |
|-------------|------------|---------------|
| **Anticipated** | People look forward to it | Would they notice if it didn't arrive? |
| **Personal** | Relates to the individual | Does it feel like it's for them specifically? |
| **Relevant** | About something they care about | Does it solve their problem or interest? |

**If any requirement is missing, it's not permission marketing—it's interruption with extra steps.**

---

### The Five Levels of Permission

Build your strategy around earning higher levels of permission:

#### Level 1: Situational (Lowest)
**What it is:** Permission in a specific moment
**Examples:** Chatbot interaction, webinar Q&A, customer service call
**Strategy:** Convert situational permission to ongoing permission

**Tactic:** "While I have you, would you like to join our weekly newsletter where we share [specific value]?"

#### Level 2: Brand Trust
**What it is:** General positive association with your brand
**Examples:** "I like that company," positive word-of-mouth, brand preference
**Strategy:** Build through consistent delivery on promises

**Warning:** Brand trust is expensive to build, hard to measure, and easily damaged.

#### Level 3: Personal Relationship
**What it is:** Permission to communicate directly and regularly
**Examples:** Email subscribers, newsletter readers, social followers who engage
**Strategy:** This is your primary focus—build and nurture these relationships

**Key insight:** Powerful but hard to scale. Quality over quantity.

#### Level 4: Points/Loyalty
**What it is:** Permission earned through ongoing value exchange
**Examples:** Loyalty programs, premium content access, exclusive communities
**Strategy:** Create structures that reward ongoing engagement

**Tactic:** Offer increasing value for increasing permission (free → premium → VIP)

#### Level 5: Intravenous (Highest)
**What it is:** Complete trust to make decisions for the customer
**Examples:** Amazon Subscribe & Save, managed services, auto-replenishment
**Strategy:** Earn through consistent delivery, then offer convenience

**This is the goal:** "Just handle it for me."

---

### The Permission Marketing Process

#### Step 1: Interrupt (Paradoxically)

You must initially interrupt to get permission. The difference: **the goal of the interruption is NOT to sell—it's to get permission to sell later.**

**Good Interruption:**
- "Want a free guide on [valuable topic]?"
- "Join 10,000 marketers who get our weekly insights"
- "Get our research report on [relevant problem]"

**Bad Interruption:**
- "Buy now!"
- "Limited time offer!"
- "Act fast!"

#### Step 2: Offer a Clear Incentive

Give prospects a compelling reason to grant permission.

**Incentive Types:**

| Type | Example | Best For |
|------|---------|----------|
| Information | Guide, checklist, research | B2B, expertise-based |
| Entertainment | Games, quizzes, stories | Consumer, engagement |
| Access | Early access, exclusive content | Tech, premium brands |
| Discounts | First purchase offer | E-commerce, retail |
| Community | Join the conversation | Lifestyle, causes |

**The Incentive Test:** Is the incentive valuable enough that people would pay for it?

#### Step 3: Reinforce Permission Over Time

Permission isn't a one-time event—it's an ongoing relationship.

**The Drip Approach:**
- Consistent communication schedule
- Increasing value over time
- Gradual relationship deepening
- Every touchpoint reinforces the permission

**Warning Signs Permission Is Fading:**
- Declining open rates
- Increasing unsubscribes
- No replies or engagement
- People forgetting they signed up

#### Step 4: Expand Permission (The Ladder)

As trust builds, ask for more permission.

**The Permission Ladder:**

```
STRANGER
    ↓ [Interrupt with valuable offer]
AWARE
    ↓ [Provide incentive to subscribe]
SUBSCRIBER
    ↓ [Deliver consistent value]
ENGAGED SUBSCRIBER
    ↓ [Invite to deeper content]
ACTIVE PARTICIPANT
    ↓ [Offer trial/sample]
CUSTOMER
    ↓ [Deliver exceptional experience]
REPEAT CUSTOMER
    ↓ [Invite to advocate]
ADVOCATE
```

**Key:** Never skip steps. Earn each level before asking for the next.

#### Step 5: Convert to Action

Eventually, leverage permission to generate sales.

**Critical Rules:**
- Never abuse permission
- Make selling feel like service
- Ensure the offer is relevant to the permission granted
- Make it easy to say no without losing them

---

### Seth's Ultimate Test

> "The test is easy: If you didn't send out your emails tomorrow, would people contact you to find out what happened?"

**If yes:** You have real permission
**If no:** You have a list, not permission

**The Fork in the Road:**

| Permission Marketer | Spammer With a List |
|--------------------|--------------------|
| Clear and open | Skirting edges |
| Delivers anticipated value | Trading lists |
| Personal and relevant | Link-bait subject lines |
| Welcomes unsubscribes | Evades policies |

There's no middle ground.

---

### The Five Rules of Permission

**Rule 1: Permission Is Non-Transferable**
You cannot sell, rent, or share permission. Just because someone trusts you doesn't mean they trust your partners.

**Rule 2: Permission Can Be Revoked**
At any moment, the customer can withdraw permission. One abuse can end years of relationship.

**Rule 3: Permission Must Be Earned**
You cannot buy permission. No shortcut exists. It must be earned through value exchange.

**Rule 4: Permission Deepens Through Use**
Use permission well → earn more permission. Neglect it → permission fades.

**Rule 5: Permission Requires Patience**
Building real permission takes time. Rushing destroys trust.

---

## Examples

### Example 1: B2B Software Company

**Current State:**
- Buying Google Ads
- Cold email outreach
- Trade show booths
- Content behind gates
- 2% conversion rate from leads

**Permission Marketing Audit:**

| Tactic | Type | Permission Level |
|--------|------|------------------|
| Google Ads | Interruption | Low |
| Cold email | Interruption | None |
| Trade shows | Situational | Low |
| Gated content | Earned | Medium (if valuable) |

**Permission-Based Transformation:**

**Step 1: Create Ungated Value**
- Weekly newsletter with genuinely useful insights
- Free tools that solve real problems
- Research reports shared freely

**Step 2: Earn Subscription**
- "Want this weekly? Subscribe for Tuesday delivery"
- Tool: "Want to save your results? Create a free account"
- Research: "Want future reports first? Join our list"

**Step 3: Build Relationship**
- Welcome sequence that delivers immediate value
- Regular content that proves expertise
- Personal touches (founder emails, responses)

**Step 4: Expand Permission**
- Webinars for engaged subscribers
- Community for active participants
- Product trials for interested community members

**Step 5: Convert**
- Relevant offers to those who've shown interest
- Case studies from similar companies
- Clear path to purchase when ready

**Expected Results:**
- Smaller list, much higher engagement
- Lower CAC (earned attention vs. paid)
- Higher conversion rates from qualified, interested prospects
- Better customer retention (relationship started with value)

---

### Example 2: E-commerce DTC Brand

**Current State:**
- Facebook/Instagram ads
- Popup for 10% off first purchase
- Batch email blasts to full list
- 15% open rate, declining

**Permission Marketing Audit:**

The 10% popup is interruption disguised as permission. People don't want the emails—they want the discount.

**Permission-Based Transformation:**

**Step 1: Reframe the Value Exchange**
Instead of: "10% off for your email"
Try: "Join 50,000 customers who get first access to new drops, styling tips, and exclusive content"

**Step 2: Segment by Interest**
- What category interests them?
- What content do they engage with?
- What's their purchase history?

**Step 3: Deliver Anticipated Value**
- If they love styling tips → weekly style guide
- If they love new drops → first-access notifications
- If they're bargain hunters → sale alerts only

**Step 4: Make Emails Personal**
- "Sarah, based on what you've bought..."
- "Since you loved the summer collection..."
- Recommendations based on actual behavior

**Step 5: Earn the Right to Sell**
- Selling feels like service, not interruption
- Offers are relevant to expressed interests
- Unsubscribe is welcomed, not hidden

**New Welcome Sequence:**

```
Email 1 (Immediate): Welcome + the thing they signed up for
Email 2 (Day 2): Founder story + brand values
Email 3 (Day 5): Most popular content based on their interest
Email 4 (Day 7): Customer story from someone like them
Email 5 (Day 10): Personalized product recommendations
Email 6 (Day 14): Invitation to follow on social/join community
```

**Expected Results:**
- Higher open rates (30-40% vs. 15%)
- Lower unsubscribe rates
- Higher customer lifetime value
- Email becomes revenue driver, not annoyance

---

## Checklists & Templates

### Permission Audit Checklist

For each marketing tactic, ask:

**Is it Anticipated?**
- [ ] Would people notice if it didn't arrive?
- [ ] Do they look forward to it?
- [ ] Did they explicitly ask for it?

**Is it Personal?**
- [ ] Does it feel like it's for them specifically?
- [ ] Is it based on their actual behavior/interests?
- [ ] Does it acknowledge the relationship?

**Is it Relevant?**
- [ ] Does it solve a problem they have?
- [ ] Is it about something they care about?
- [ ] Is it timely to their situation?

**If any answer is "No"**: It's not permission marketing.

### Lead Magnet Evaluation

Before creating a lead magnet:

| Question | Good Answer | Bad Answer |
|----------|-------------|------------|
| Would people pay for this? | "Probably yes" | "Definitely not" |
| Is it immediately useful? | "They can apply it today" | "Maybe someday" |
| Does it demonstrate expertise? | "Shows we know our stuff" | "Generic info" |
| Does it attract the right people? | "Our ideal customers" | "Anyone with a pulse" |
| Does it set up next permission ask? | "Natural next step" | "Dead end" |

### Email Permission Health Check

Run this monthly:

| Metric | Healthy | Concerning | Action |
|--------|---------|------------|--------|
| Open rate | >25% | <15% | Re-engagement or cleanup |
| Click rate | >3% | <1% | Content relevance audit |
| Unsubscribe rate | <0.5% | >1% | Value proposition review |
| Reply rate | >1% | 0% | Personalization needed |
| "Missing you" messages | Some | None | You have a list, not permission |

### Welcome Sequence Template

```
EMAIL 1 (Immediate)
Subject: Here's your [thing they signed up for]
Goal: Deliver promised value immediately
CTA: Access the content

EMAIL 2 (Day 1-2)
Subject: Why we created [thing]
Goal: Share story, build connection
CTA: None (pure value)

EMAIL 3 (Day 3-4)
Subject: The one thing most [audience] get wrong about [topic]
Goal: Demonstrate expertise
CTA: Read the full guide

EMAIL 4 (Day 5-7)
Subject: How [customer name] achieved [result]
Goal: Social proof, possibility
CTA: See the full story

EMAIL 5 (Day 8-10)
Subject: [Name], a question for you
Goal: Create dialogue, understand them
CTA: Reply with their answer

EMAIL 6 (Day 12-14)
Subject: Ready for the next step?
Goal: Expand permission or convert
CTA: Depends on permission level earned
```

---

## Skill Boundaries

### What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring audio production workflows
- Providing technical guidance
- Creating quality checklists
- Suggesting creative approaches

### What This Skill Cannot Do
- Replace audio engineering expertise
- Make subjective creative decisions
- Access or edit audio files directly
- Guarantee commercial success

## References

**Primary Sources:**
- Godin, Seth. (1999). *Permission Marketing*. Simon & Schuster.
- Godin, Seth. (2018). *This is Marketing*. Portfolio.

**Additional Resources:**
- Seth's Blog: seths.blog
- First four chapters free: seths.blog/2011/01/the-first-four-chapters-of-permission-marketing/
- Akimbo podcast

---

## Related Skills

- **content-writing** - Creating content that earns attention
- **email-writing** - Crafting emails people want to receive
- **storytelling-storybrand** - Using story to build connection
- **purple-cow-marketing** - Creating remarkable things worth talking about
- **audience-research** - Understanding what your audience actually wants
