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The Kurt Cobain Guide to Startup Success

There’s no doubt that rock stars can be creative entrepreneurs, just like entrepreneurs can be creative rock stars.

But Kurt Cobain?

It may seem a stretch to call Kurt Cobain and Nirvana entrepreneurs. After all, Cobain was so disturbed by fame that he ultimately took his own life to escape the pressure.

The success of the album Nevermind was an accident of creative genius by punk rockers who reluctantly hit it big, right?

Not exactly.

The Deliberate Creative Genius of Nirvana

I didn’t want to be a fringe alternative band… I’d rather be a rock star. ~Kurt Cobain, About a Son

An entrepreneur is successful because his passion for an outcome leads him to organize available resources in new and more valuable ways. When you look at it that way, Kurt Cobain was definitely a creative entrepreneur, and he and the other members of Nirvana knew the outcome they wanted.

They wanted to be rock stars.

Now, that doesn’t mean they wanted to be rock stars like the crop at the time, such as Bon Jovi, Mötley Crüe, or god forbid, Warrant. Ironically, Nirvana’s success quickly knocked the hair bands off commercial radio.

The innovative mix of punk, pop hooks and 70’s guitar rock allowed Nirvana to change the face of popular music forever. And even though it’s likely they never imagined how big it would get, Cobain candidly reveals it was all according to plan in the 2006 documentary About a Son.

Take a look at the three elements that propelled Nirvana to the top of the charts. They just might help you succeed in your own entrepreneurial endeavors.

1. Break the Status Quo

It wasn’t cool to play pop music as a punk band. And I wanted to mix the two. ~Kurt Cobain, About a Son

To innovate in epic ways, the first step is to rebel against the status quo of the industry or community you belong to. In Nirvana’s case, the music scenes in Seattle and Olympia, Washington, were notoriously anti-commercial.

Nirvana’s indie debut Bleach showed promise, but that abrasive, relatively unstructured noise rock was considered “acceptable” to the Pacific Northwest music scene. Cobain wanted to create hybrid songs with pop elements—along the lines of the Pixies—but met resistance from the community and even from Sub Pop, the label he’d worshiped such a short time ago.

So Nirvana made the heretical move of signing with a major label, releasing Nevermind with Geffen. Once Smells Like Teen Spirit broke through, the grunge gold rush began, and Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and Alice in Chains crossed over onto mainstream radio next.

Takeaway: Be a leader, not a follower. You’ll certainly annoy the status quo, but only until you’re reaping the rewards of the innovative pioneer.

2. Mix Innovation With Fundamentals

I don’t think we’re better than the other bands… We got attention because our songs have hooks, which stick in people’s minds. ~Kurt Cobain, About a Son

Most of the songs on Nevermind were written before the band went into the studio. While the music is no way conventional, the tracks possess catchy hooks that are psychologically pleasing.

In other words, Cobain’s desire to add pop hooks to punk compositions is a classic way to “organize available resources in new and more valuable ways.” This is creative entrepreneurism at it’s finest, and Cobain got the rock star outcome he hoped for (be careful what you wish for, etc.).

The band chose producer Butch Vig, whose work with Sonic Youth Cobain admired, and selected Andy Wallace to mix the album. The group walked a fine line by combining polished production with punk aesthetics, and they nailed it (even though Cobain complained years later that Nevermind was too polished).

Takeaway: This is the fine line all creative entrepreneurs walk. Ignore market desire and human psychology, and you fail. Diminish the innovative elements that set you apart, and you become another unremarkable “me too” effort.

3. Bake the Marketing Into the Product

We didn’t do anything. It was just one of those ‘Get out of the way and duck’ records. ~Geffen President Ed Rosenblatt

When Nirvana signed with Geffen Records, they got a tried-and-true marketing machine. Radio promotion and retail positioning had been boiled down to a science in the days before digital distribution turned music marketing on its head.

The selection and release of singles was classic record-label strategy. Smells Like Teen Spirit would go first, which would introduce the band to radio listeners, DJs, and programming directors. This would pave the way for Come as You Are, which would be the more likely hit.

That’s where the plan fell apart.

To say Smells Like Teen Spirit did better than expected is a monumental understatement. A song recorded in three takes with lyrics penned minutes before turned Cobain into the reluctant voice of Generation X.

Geffen hoped that Nevermind would sell at least 250,000 copies, which is what the Vig-produced Sonic Youth album sold. Nevermind has sold over 10,000,000 copies to date, and is critically-regarded as one of the best rock albums in history, just as Smells Like Teen Spirit is considered one of the greatest rock songs ever recorded.

Takeaway: These days, creative entrepreneurs of all stripes can use the Internet to spark their own viral success stories by creating remarkable products and services. Home runs like Nevermind are rare and unexpected, so you still need a smart marketing plan. Just know when to “get out of the way and duck” when the audience decides to market for you.

In Summary (Plus One More Crucial Tip)

Kurt Cobain can definitely teach us things about starting our own business, whether big or small:

  1. The first key is always a new and better approach, or a fresh and innovative way to do the tried and true. If the “do it the way it’s done” crowd tells you you’re wrong, crazy, or stupid, you may be onto something.
  2. You can’t ignore the realities of market demand and human psychology, but often the market doesn’t realize what it wants and the mind craves something new.
  3. Create things that people naturally want to market for you.
  4. Be careful who you marry.

About the Author: Brian Clark is a new media entrepreneur and co-founder of Lateral Action. Subscribe today to get free updates by email or RSS.

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View Comments (55)

  • I agree with everything except one point (which further validates your story): Kurt did not take his own life, it was taken from him - there's been a plethora of scientific evidence to prove so.

    Also, Nirvana's follow up to In Utero was marketing to the indie crowd in order to save his reputation as many were labeling him as a 'sell out' for the polished sound of Nevermind. He wanted to create a loud, noisy, dirty sound in order to save face. The result was probably their best album.

  • Great post, I especially like point #2. Not an easy thing to accomplish, mixing inovation and fundamentals, I guess that is why it pays off so well when someone finds a way to do it.

  • This reminds me of how my boss considered my approaches to certain tasks of my job as irrational. Now that I read this, I feel pretty good about my irrational approach.

  • Great article! I had heard Kurt in interviews and had been very impressed by the way he talked; he definitely seemed very intelligent and down to earth. His musical genius is surely missed.

  • This is an interesting blog but I disagree with the tags of genius and the mystic aurora that gets surrounded with Nirvana and their success. I think a closer look at the music scene of the time has a more valuable lesson.

    What you have to remember with Nirvana is that they had been playing and touring the underground indie scene in America for a long time before Nevermind, with little success. It is true that they bridged a gap between Pop melodies with American indie rock stylings but this was hardly innovative at the time, nor where they in anyway the first to do it. If you look at the many other bands other underground pop indie/punk bands of the scene at the time and ask why didn't they become supermassive?

    For example Husker Du who were one of the first underground American bands to sign to a major label and release 3 albums with warner before breaking up in 1987.
    http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=eoKeH7JYE48&feature=related
    Husker Du were a massive influence on another pop punk/indie bands such the Pixies and Nirvana - they were gods of the underground scene in the mid 1980s.

    Another great pop/indie/punk band The Pixies who were playing around a little earlier than Nirvana and released brilliant music but never broke into the super mainstream like Nirvana. Kurt Cobain sites the album Surfa Rosa by the Pixies as a major influence but they were never super massive like Nirvana. but why?

    Both the pixies and Husker Du were examples of 1. Breaking the status quo 2. Mixing innovation with fundamentals 3. Baking the marketing into the product And Kurt widely says how he took so much from these bands but why were they not famous and the like Nirvana????

    Steve Albini (who recorded nearly all the prominent and notable underground bands on that time including the pixies, husker du and Nirvanas in utero album) once said in a question and answer session that no one was expecting Nirvana's huge success. And it had more to do with freaky luck; mtv and the radios desire to move on from hair metal bands.
    Nirvana was just the first lucky band fruit to be picked from a tree full of already ripe fruit...so they were just really lucky

    I personally think that Nirvanas success was not so much about their creativity but a combination of good luck, timing and being ready with the product. To take a lesson from Nirvana it would be just do your thing and love doing it (whether with or against the status quo) and maybe you will get lucky when your time comes...but just be ready in case your fruit is picked.

    The 3 lessons of this blog I think ring true with beastie boys first mainstream album license to ill (considered the first white hip hop album) and illustrate your points far more clearly.

  • @ Creativist -

    It is uncertainty that creates risk, not “stupid” or “impulsive” behavior. Some things are pretty certain, like gravity, or the fact that we’re all going to die some day. Others are less certain, like my latest-greatest money-making idea, and involve taking a bet or chance that I’m right.

    Well, now... if I had 12 beers in an hour and suddenly decided driving my car was a brilliant idea - without any uncertainty - I'd say I'd be creating a situation of high risk. Mmhm.

    I'll also say that your latest-greatest money-making idea had some thought in behind it and wasn't stupid or impulsive, even if you are taking a chance.

    If I bet on an idea that has a failure probability of anything greater than zero, then I’m taking a risk no matter how much homework I’ve done or how strong my belief is.

    Absolutely. What I disagreed with was the original implication that going against the current of what's being done is *high* risk. That's all!

  • @ Angus: anyone who says that luck is no part of success is either a liar or a fool ;-)

    Simply put no matter how good you are, if bad luck comes into play, failure is just around the corner. On the flip side, even those that aren't particularly great can hit it big with a bit of luck.

  • I am both muscian and marketing company, noting one other thing about the article and something that is so common and relates to every new and innovative idea In my experience some of the best ideas are lost due to not being ready for its success. Kurt Cobane is a typical example. His feel and commitment to his ideas were unshakeable. yet the one skill of coping with change was lacking. When success in any area happens there is a change. It is this carefull consideration married with creative genuis that is sustainable. a point missed in so many fabulous entrepreneurial ideas.

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