Thursday, February 27, 2014

And the Oscar for engagement goes to. . .

With the Oscars coming up, we conducted our annual Academy Awards Ad Engagement Study to see who’ll be winning the advertising portion of the program.

To see which brands will take home their Oscars for Engagement this year – as well as some odds on which movies and stars will win the big categories this Sunday – we invite you to read our Forbes column, The Academy Award Winners And Losers. Odds For Movies And Odds For Ads.

As this is the Academy Awards, you can almost hear Dietz & Schwartz’s famous song, “That’s Entertainment” playing in the background. You know the tune. It starts like this:

A clown with his pants falling down,
Or the dance that’s a dream of romance,Or the scene where the villain is mean.That’s entertainment!


But it’s not engagement!
Or at least, not brand engagement. And this year the odds of ads engaging versus entertaining turned out to be lower than ever before.

Over and over again Brand Keys has found that engaged consumers are six times more likely to behave positively towards a brand, which, we’d point out, are much better than usual odds.
The world may be a stage, and the stage may be a world of entertainment, but if it’s your brand we’re talking about, bet your money on engagement.

Enjoy the show!

Brand Keys, Inc. partner of
Brand Lounge in the Middle East
www.brandloungeme.com

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Coping With The Competition


I’ve been in the marketing business for over 40 years. I’ve seen the good old times and the difficult new times. When people ask me what has changed, my response is one word: competition. What I thought was a competitive marketplace looks like a tea party today. Everybody is after everybody’s business.

Because of this ugly fact of life, the key to survival is to start every marketing plan with your competition in mind. It's not what you want to do; it's what your competition will let you do. For the next two column, I'll give you survival tips:

1. Avoid a Competitor’s Strength and Exploit His Weakness

When a competitor is known for one thing, you have to be known for something else. Quite often, a competitor's built-in weakness is the something else that you can exploit. If McDonald’s (nyse: MCD - news - people ) strength is that of being a little kids' place, Burger King can exploit that by being a grown-up kids' place. For years, Detroit’s automobiles were perceived as not being very reliable. Toyota (nyse: TM - news - people ) was able to exploit these perceptions and take ownership of the attribute of "reliability."

But remember, we’re talking strength and weakness in the minds of the marketplace. Marketing is a battle of perceptions. What you’re really doing is exploiting perceptions.

2. Always Be a Little Bit Paranoid About Competition

We’re living in a world where everyone is after everyone’s business. You have to realize that one of your competitors is probably in a meeting figuring out how to nail you in some way or another. You must be constantly gathering information on what your competitors are planning. This can come from an astute sales force, a friendly customer or from some research.

Never underestimate your competitors. In fact, you're safer if you overestimate them. AT&T, DEC, Levi's and Crest are testimony to underestimating the kind of damage competitors can do even to market leaders.

3. Competitors Will Usually Get Better, If Pushed

Companies that figure they can exploit a sloppy competitor make big mistakes. They ridicule their product or service and say they can do things better. Then, lo and behold, their big competitor suddenly improves, and that so-called advantage melts away.

No. 2 Avis did indeed try harder, but Hertz quickly improved its efforts. Then one day it ran a devastating ad with this headline: For years, Avis has been telling you they are No. 2. Now we’re going to tell you why.

Then Hertz went on to lay out all its improvements. Avis never quite recovered. Never build your program around your competitors' mistakes. They will correct them in short order.

4. When Business Is Threatened, Competitors Aren’t Rational

Survival is a powerful instinct in life and in business. When threatened, all rationality goes out the window. I have a favorite story about this tendency.

A startup company came up with a unique packaging system for baby carrots that produced a decided price advantage over the two big suppliers already in the business.

To get on the supermarket shelves, the company entered the market not with better carrots but with a better price, which the established brands immediately matched. This only forced the new company to go lower, which once again was matched by its competitors.

When a board member asked the startup's management to predict what would happen, the management predicted that the two big companies would not continue to reduce their prices because it was "irrational." They were losing money because of their older packaging technology.

The board member called me about the prediction. I advised him that they would continue to be irrational until they forced this new upstart out of the market. Why would they make it easy for a new company that threatened their stable business?

At the next board meeting, the startup's management was encouraged to sell its new manufacturing system to one of the established brands - which it did for a nice profit.

So much for companies being rational.

Jack Trout

President
Trout & Partners Ltd
(partner of Brand Lounge in the Middle East)

Short and Sweet

If you watch a lot of television, you may have noticed that one-word titles are all the rage these days.

homelandThere’s Glee and Nashville, Homeland and Scandal, Bones and Castle.  The new fall schedule for 2013 introduced MomHostages and Betrayal.  Cable has brought us Oz and Deadwood and Dexter.
One-word TV titles are not new (think Dallas or Friends or Seinfeld).  But they’re growing in popularity, as TV becomes more of a digital experience – and viewers’ attention spans wander across many possible options.
Shorter is better when a show is live on-air, online, on the Web, and viral on other distribution channels.  Says the executive VP of drama development at CBS Entertainment, “The best titles for us are simple and descriptive and memorable. but also broad enough to draw in the biggest possible audience.”
A snappy title, no matter how short and sweet, won’t make a bad show good.  Same thing with brand names in any category.  There has to be performance behind the moniker.
Still, the quest for a one-word name is well worth it.  Whether it’s packaging, signage, memorability, or impact – they all benefit from an economy of letters.  Consider:
  • Ally in banking.
  • cirocApple in computers.
  • Canon in copiers.
  • Ciroc in vodka.
  • Crest in toothpaste.
  • Ford in automobiles.
  • Head in skis.
  • Gap in retailing.
  • Joy in perfume.
  • Nike in athletic wear.
  • skypeScope in mouthwash.
  • Skype in free communications.
  • Sony in electronics.
  • Tide in detergents.
  • Xbox in games.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

New Trends You Should Leverage in 2014


It was management consultant, Peter Drucker, who advised the best way to predict the future was to create it. But as every marketer knows, creating new things is difficult. Really difficult. But fortunately, we have a solution.

The next best way to predict the future is to have access to validated and predictive loyalty and emotional engagement metrics to help point the way. Happily, we do, and after examining over 100,000 consumer assessments, we’ve identified 14 critical trends to help marketers create their own, successful futures next year. We invite you to take a look and see which will be most useful for your brand.

A new year provides brands with a chance for new resolutions and new beginnings, so it’s worth noting Mr. Drucker also advised companies if they wanted to do something new, they had to stop doing something old.

These 14 new trends provide brands the opportunity to break old habits, embrace new methods of brand engagement and brand marketing, and to help to create new and profitable futures for themselves.



Sincerely,

Brand Keys, Inc. Partner of

Brand Lounge in the Middle East
www.brandloungeme.com

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Ultimate Question of Brand, the Consumer Marketplace & Everything

This is it: “What do consumers expect?”
It comes in different forms, with marketers wondering “What do consumers really want in my category?” “Will consumer want this?” “Will consumer buy it?” “Will consumers buy mine?” Well, here’s a question for you:
“Want answers predictive of consumer behavior in the marketplace?” If you do, category engagement drivers can help. They identify how consumers view categories, how they compare offerings, and they answer the ultimate question, “What do consumers expect?” Know that and you’ll know what they’ll buy.
For an in-depth look at how it works in one category, we invite you to read the Branding Magazine article, Do You Want a Phone With A Camera Or A Camera With A Phone?
When brands keep an eye on category engagement drivers and consumer expectations, brands get a high definition view of the category through consumers’ eyes.
If it helps, think of it as a brand sensor that’s as wide as the category!


Sincerely,

Brand Keys, Inc. Partner of
Brand Lounge in the Middle East
www.brandloungeme.com

Monday, July 23, 2012

The Critical Word Being Brand

For those of you out there who think brand and fashion have broken up and don't even go to the same parties anymore, think again. Brand continues to pull at the heartstrings of consumers after the economic free-fall of 2008, when only 8% of consumers said they cared all that much about brands. Well, this couple is back on after their break, and nearly a third of consumers say brands are an important factor in their purchase decision – more than tripling in importance in the last four years. This fashion trend has been confirmed by recently reported retail sales. High-end retailers, i.e., those selling brands, have done significantly better than retailers selling predominantly on price. Ralph Lauren, J. Crew, and Chanel showed up on this year’s list. So, what was it exactly that put the spark back in this union? A little something called meaning, which is a big factor in how people decide what something is worth to them. In fact, the change in the economy was what drove up the importance of true brands – brands that actually stand for something in the minds and hearts of consumers. To read more about this study, and what brands made it to the top, we invite you to read Marketing Daily’s "In Fashion, Brands Intensify Their Comeback” and get the back-story on what brands made the all right moves in this successful consumer romance. Click here for more on our Fashion Brand Index study and to see how real brands ranked. By the way, it’s not only consumers who feel this way. Professionals too. Legendary designer Giorgio Armani also noted, “The difference between fashion and apparel is brand.”

Sincerely,

Brand Keys, Inc. Partner of
Brand Lounge in the Middle East
www.brandloungeme.com

Thursday, March 22, 2012

The Ten Commandments of Marketing

The commandments do not come from a mountain top. Lo it were that easy. They come from many years of experience in categories from caskets to computers and everything in between.
You might ask, why write about Commandments since you’ve already written about “Immutable Laws” (a book you might have read)? It struck me that laws are always based on a set of principles, something like a constitution. That was what was missing. So, I decided that just as religion had the “Commandments” so could marketing. Especially, since marketing is about do’s and don’ts. So, dear reader, as you begin this article, I give you the same warning that came with my laws: Violate them at your own risk.

1. Thou shalt realize that perception is reality.
To be successful today, you must touch base with reality. And the only reality that counts is what’s already in the prospect’s mind. It’s what “Positioning” is all about. The basic approach to positioning is not to create something new and different, but to manipulate what’s already up there in the mind, to retie the connections that already exist. But be aware that retying those connections must result in a point of difference vs. your competitors.

2. Thou should not commit the “me too” mistake.
Many people believe that the basic issue in marketing is convincing the prospective client that they have a better product or service. They say to themselves, “We might not be first, but we’re going to be better.” That may be true, but if you’re late into a market space and have to do battle with large, well-established competitors, then your marketing strategy is probably faulty. Me-too just won’t cut it.
If the secret of success is getting into the prospective customer’s mind first, which strategy are most companies committed to? The better-product strategy. Benchmarking against your competitors is a popular subject in the business management field. It’s an essential element in a process often called “total quality management” (TQM).
Benchmarking doesn’t work because regardless of a product’s objective quality, people perceive the first brand to enter their mind as superior. Marketing is a battle of perceptions, not products. When you’re a me-too, you’re a second-class citizen.

3. Thou shalt be aware of what you are selling.
This may surprise you, but I have spent a good bit of my time over the years figuring out
exactly what people are trying to sell. Defining the product category in a simple, understandable way is essential.
Companies, large and small, often have a tough time describing their product, especially if it’s a new category and a new technology. Or else, they describe the product in confusing terms that doom the effort right out of the gate.
The positioning of a product must begin with what the product is. We sort and store information by category, so your chances of getting into a customer’s mind are slim to none if the category is vague.
The biggest marketing successes come with basic, powerful explanations of the product being offered. Customers knew what the companies were selling and how the products were really different.

4. Thou shalt realize that truth will not out.
The failure to understand the simple truth that marketing is a battle of perceptions trips up thousands of would-be entrepreneurs every year.
Marketing people are preoccupied with doing research and “getting the facts.” They analyze the situation to make sure the truth is on their side. Then they sail confidently into the marketing arena, secure in the knowledge that they have the best product and that ultimately the best product will win.
This is an illusion. There is no objective reality. There are no facts. There are no best products. All that exists in the world of marketing are perceptions in the minds of customers or prospects. The perception is the reality. Everything else is an illusion.

5. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s idea.
A me-too product is bad enough, and equally problematic is a me-too idea: two
companies cannot own the same concept in the customer’s mind.
When a competitor owns a word or position in the prospect’s mind, it is futile to attempt to own the same idea. For instance, Volvo has preempted the concept of “safety.” Many other automobile companies, including Mercedes-Benz and General Motors, have tried to run marketing campaigns based on safety. Yet no one except Volvo has succeeded in getting into the prospect’s mind with a safety message.

6. Thou shalt not be impressed with your own success.
Success often leads to arrogance, and arrogance to failure. When people become successful, they tend to become less objective. They often substitute their own judgment for what the market wants.
As their successes mounted, companies like General Motors, Sears, and IBM became arrogant. They felt they could do anything they wanted in the marketplace. Success leads to trouble.
The bigger the company, the more likely it is that the chief executive has lost touch with the front lines. This might be the single most important factor limiting the growth of a corporation. All other factors favor size. Marketing is war, and the fist principle of warfare is force. The larger army, the larger company, has the advantage. But the large company gives up some of that advantage if it cannot stay focused on the marketing battle that takes place in the mind of the customer. Small companies are mentally closer to the front than big companies. That may be one reason for their rapid growth in the past decades. They haven’t been tainted by success.

7. Thou shalt not try to be everything to everybody.
When you try to be all things to all people, you inevitably wind up in trouble. Better advice comes from one manager who said, “I’d rather be strong somewhere than weak everywhere.”
This kind of “all things” thinking leads to what is called “line extension.”In a narrow sense, line extension involves taking the brand name of a successful product (e.g., A1 Poultry Sauce). It sounds so logical. “We make A1, a great sauce that gets the dominant share of the steak business. But people are switching from beef to chicken, so let’s introduce a poultry product. And what better name to use then A1. That way people will know the poultry sauce comes from the makers of that great steak sauce, A1.”
But marketing is a battle of perception, not product. In the mind, A1 is not the brand name, but the sauce itself. “Would you pass me the A1 please?” asks the diner. Nobody replies: “A1 what?”
Needless to say, the A1 poultry launch was a dismal failure.

8. Thou shalt not live only by the numbers.
Big companies are in a bind. On the one hand, Wall Street is staring at them asking, “How much are your sales and profits going to grow next month, next quarter, next year?” On the other hand, an endless number of competitors are staring at them saying, “We’re not going to let you grow if we can help it.”
So what happens? The CEO lies to Wall Street and then turns around to tell the marketing people what is expected in terms of profit and growth. They in turn scramble back to their offices and try to figure out how to make those unreasonable numbers.
Brash predictions about earnings growth often lead to missed targets, battered stock, and even creative accounting. But worse than that, they lead to bad decisions.
As panic sets in, upper management falls into the line extension, or the everything-for-everybody trap to drive the numbers up. Rather than staying focused on being strong somewhere, they opt for being weak everywhere. Their only hope is that they will be promoted before it all hits the fan.

9. Thou must be willing to attack yourself.
Much has been written about the likes of DEC, Xerox, AT&T, and Kodak and their efforts to move from slow-growth to high growth businesses. When this is exacerbated, companies are faced with what have been called disruptive technologies: DEC faced the desktop computer revolution; Xerox, the surge in laser printing; and Kodak, the digital camera.
Transforming a company when the underlying technology changes is no easy task. First of all, Wall Street is upset because lots of shareholder money starts to disappear in efforts that earn very little in return.
Traditional customers are often alienated as the sales force’s attention becomes diffused by new ventures. The internal folks become very uncomfortable with all this change in the air.
Though difficult, leaders have no choice in this matter. They must find a way to move to that better idea or technology, even if it threatens their base business. If they don’t, their future will be in question, especially as that technology is improved and picks up momentum.


10. Thou must have top management involved.
When the CEO or high-level management doesn’t take charge of strategy, things rarely go well. In today’s rough-and-tumble world, marketing strategy is too critical to be left to middle-level management. After I make that “you’re in charge” speech to general managers or CEOs, they often tell me that they don’t want to undermine their employees. They want to give them the responsibility they were promised.
That’s all well and good for morale, but I encourage them to think the Navy way.
When a naval vessel has a problem, the ultimate responsibility is not that of the young officer who had the conn when the accident occurred. It’s the captain of the ship who must answer to that board of inquiry. And chances are, his career is in trouble.
In the business world, it’s the CEO who has to answer to the board when things go bad. It’s your job on the line if you’re at the top, so you’d better take charge to make sure those bad things don’t happen to you.

Jack Trout
President, Trout & Partners
partner of BrandLounge Middle East
www.brandloungeme.com