There are similarities in the language - yes we could say that Raskin's promised land is my model's heaven.
But there is a major and important difference.
Raskin's model postulates that the promised land (heaven) should be the point of the whole story. For him, the whole story should be geared towards selling the promised land. (look at his other articles, he states that the promised land aka heaven is the most important part of any story).
But this is wrong.
Heaven (Raskin's promised land) is the same for most businesses operating in the space. For example, if you sell B2B the heaven you'll be selling is the same as every other business in B2B - "more money".
What these businesses are actually selling is a new doctrine. That is the point of the story - to sell a new way of thinking.
Hubspot sold the doctrine of "inbound marketing". Their heaven (promised land) is more clients and more money.
Zuora sells the doctrine of "subscription economy". Their heaven is the same as Hubspot's.
Drift is selling the doctrine of "conversational marketing". Their heaven is the same as the other two.
David Allen is selling the doctrine of "getting things done". His heaven (promised land) is "more productivity" and this is the same as every other productivity coach in the world.
What enables these businesses to distinguish themselves from each other and their competitors is not the promised land (because it's the same as virtually everyone else's) but their doctrines.
My model is a more accurate explanation of what is happening. That's important because we use models to recreate them for our own situations - you need an accurate model in order to do it right.
As Dharmesh Shah himself put - their success came from creating a quasi-religion of "inbound marketing".
This is how this model views it - through the lens of religious and other ideological story-telling, and it more accurately fits what these companies have done.
But there is a major and important difference.
Raskin's model postulates that the promised land (heaven) should be the point of the whole story. For him, the whole story should be geared towards selling the promised land. (look at his other articles, he states that the promised land aka heaven is the most important part of any story).
But this is wrong.
Heaven (Raskin's promised land) is the same for most businesses operating in the space. For example, if you sell B2B the heaven you'll be selling is the same as every other business in B2B - "more money".
What these businesses are actually selling is a new doctrine. That is the point of the story - to sell a new way of thinking.
Hubspot sold the doctrine of "inbound marketing". Their heaven (promised land) is more clients and more money.
Zuora sells the doctrine of "subscription economy". Their heaven is the same as Hubspot's.
Drift is selling the doctrine of "conversational marketing". Their heaven is the same as the other two.
David Allen is selling the doctrine of "getting things done". His heaven (promised land) is "more productivity" and this is the same as every other productivity coach in the world.
What enables these businesses to distinguish themselves from each other and their competitors is not the promised land (because it's the same as virtually everyone else's) but their doctrines.
My model is a more accurate explanation of what is happening. That's important because we use models to recreate them for our own situations - you need an accurate model in order to do it right.
As Dharmesh Shah himself put - their success came from creating a quasi-religion of "inbound marketing".
This is how this model views it - through the lens of religious and other ideological story-telling, and it more accurately fits what these companies have done.