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July 21, 2008

Pete Blackshaw on Credibility

Tell3000

Just finished reading Pete Blackshaw's book about "running a business in today's consumer-driven world." Those of you deep into word-of-mouth marketing and social media will already know much of what Pete shares. However, most of your business buddies will learn a lot from Pete's book. (And some of you could use a refresher course on why transparency and credibility matter immensely when citizen marketers are in control.) It's a worthy read.

One of the most worthwhile sections in the book deals with CREDIBILITY. Pete says credibility isn't on a company's balance sheet, but it should be because it is the only true resource a company has when the marketplace conversation is controlled by consumers. Pete continues by saying ...

“I would argue that today companies don’t just need to tell good stories; they also need to tell credible ones.

Credibility rules the day, and if a company’s story doesn’t foster trust, if it doesn’t convey transparency and authenticity, if it isn’t informed by listening and responding to customers, and it isn’t positively affirmed by what consumers are saying to one another, then it’s just another phony story. And consumers will see right through it.” [TELL 3,000 | pg. 39]

Right-on. Smart stuff.

June 08, 2008

Advertising Age recommends NOT ADVERTISING

Yep, you read that header right — Advertising Age recommends NOT ADVERTISING. A recent editorial in Ad Age shared HMOs (hot marketing opinions) about JetBlue’s current advertising campaign. The gist is this …

“JetBlue is missing the point with its recent ad push. What it needs is to get back to what made it a media and consumer darling: customer service and good internal and external communication.”

“… convincing more people to fly doesn't seem like a smart move for an airline that has trouble handling the passengers it already has. It won't fool new passengers, and it will only upset current passengers. JetBlue achieved its success by being unlike the other airlines. Its good name spread -- via word-of-mouth and smart marketing -- because great customer service gave it a compelling story to tell.”

“Priority No. 1 should be getting back to a place where consumers want to share good stories. Take the money being wasted on that campaign and plow it into customer service.”

Let’s take this a step further. BEFORE any company spends gobs of money on an advertising campaign, it should first spend money on improving the performance of a product/service and on ratcheting up the customer experience. ‘Nuff said! Errrahh!

February 05, 2008

Howard Schultz Must Blog

As we know, Howard Schultz has returned as CEO at Starbucks.  He’s committed to fixing the “unintended consequences” caused by growing its store footprint at a rapid pace.  Such unintended consequences have included losing the company’s identity and the dilution of the unique customer experience Starbucks once delivered.  Howard has also pledged to refocus the company on growing its relationships with customers.

Writing in the Huffington Post, Jesse Kornbluth raises a valid point,

“It's interesting that Schultz professes to love Starbucks customers but has no apparent interest in hearing from us. How's that, Howard? You're going to thrill us without getting our input? Do you really think focus groups, consumer research and executive offsites will tell you what you need to know? What, exactly, do you think the Starbucks website is for?”

Jesse is onto something when he writes, “Schultz professes to love Starbucks customers but has no apparent interest in hearing from us.”

As evidence by their lack of participation, we know Starbucks, as a company, has refused to blog and refuses to participate in online conversations.  The Starbucks Gossip blog is all the proof the company needs to know that people want Starbucks to join the online conversation.  Yet, the company refuses to have a conversation with its customers (and employees) online.

Clearly, Starbucks was ahead of the curve with tapping into satisfying the consumer need of a Third Place—a place besides home and work where people could form community.  But consumers have evolved from needing a Third Place to needing a Third Space.  This Third Space includes social media spaces like blogs, vlogs, podcasts, Twitter, and many more. These are spaces where meaningful online communities are forming.

Now that the company recognizes it needs to improve its relationships with customers to improve the health of its business, maybe Starbucks will consider blogging.

Better yet, given Howard Schultz’s pledge to growing the company's relationships with customers, he should blog.  He should give us, the 50+ million Starbucks customers who visit his stores weekly, updates on how his company is making the necessarily changes to follow his vision for reclaiming the Starbucks luster. 

Howard recently told Wall Street analysts that, since returning as CEO, he has received thousands of emails from customers and employees who share his enthusiasm for reigniting the emotional attachment people have with the Starbucks brand.  With a blog, just imagine how many more messages Howard would receive from adoring customers and employees who want to see the company succeed.

Howard has always talked about growing his company to get bigger by acting smaller.  And a blog, or some other social media avenue, is the perfect tool to help big companies get smaller in customer’s eyes.  Other CEO blogs like Jonathan Schwartz’s blog and Bob Lutz’s blog have helped to make Sun Microsystems and General Motors, both goliath companies, get smaller in the eyes of customers.  And thanks to encouraging its employees to blog, companies like Microsoft look less pervasive and less evil in the eyes of customers. 

Can you imagine the conversations that would occur if Howard Schultz used the Starbucks website to regularly share updates on how his company is bringing back the old Starbucks juju?  I’m sure many of the Starbucks faithful would be thrilled to read impassioned updates from Howard.  I'm also sure Howard would receive pointed feedback (and yes, un-pointed feedback too) on activities the company should stop doing, start doing, and/or continue doing.

Unfortunately, the Starbucks corporate culture doesn’t sync with social media.  My experience of working deep inside the company tells me Starbucks is extremely careful in how they are portrayed in the traditional media.  They want to be in control of the conversation in the media as much as possible.  Since Starbucks is cautious about how traditional media portrays the company, then no way will Starbucks be comfortable playing in the non-traditional untamed waters of social media.  Do I think this is right?  Absolutely not!

Starbucks helped to popularize the “New Marketing” ethos of spending marketing dollars on making better customer experiences and not on making extravagant advertising campaigns.  In essence, Starbucks baked marketing inside its business.  It didn’t have to advertise because everything about the in-store Starbucks experience was the advertising.

Starbucks still operates under this “New Marketing” ethos but the game has evolved dramatically.  A “NOW MARKETING” movement has emerged and Starbucks hasn’t kept up.  This “NOW MARKETING” ethos is the realization of the prophetic Cluetrain Manifesto where the Internet has changed how customers expect to interact with businesses.  As the Cluetrain writers explain:

"A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most companies."

In growing its business, Starbucks has always operated under the guidance of “Be everywhere its customers expect them to be.”  This is the rationale for why the company began serving its coffee on United Airlines, expanding Internationally, operating licensed concept locations in airports, selling cold bottled coffee in convenience stores, selling whole bean coffee in grocery stores, etc.

Customers today have a new expectation. 

Customers now expect Starbucks, and other businesses, to engage in conversations with them wherever and whenever.  Be it in the Third Place or the Third Space, customers want to interact with businesses they love.  By being active in the Third Space online, companies show their love for customers by being open to having a conversation with them. 

If Howard Schultz really loves his 50+million weekly customers, he would show it by evolving his company’s culture to adopt the “NOW MARKETING” movement.  If Howard Schultz really loves Starbucks customers, he must blog.  He must carry on a conversation with us.


UPDATE:  This blog post has been simmering within me for a few weeks.  After hitting the publish button, I ventured over to the Starbucks.com site and hidden in the bottom right-hand corner is a "Howard Schultz Partner Update" link.  This particular update is titled. "What I Know to Be True."  Interesting.  Seems like Howard is using the company website to share his impassioned updates with customers and employees.

Also posted are are transcripts of voicemails to stores regarding the work ahead of the company. 

Of course, it would be better if Starbucks were to open up the conversation, allow comments from readers, and commit to making this an on-going feature.  That way, Starbucks would be embracing the "NOW MARKETING" movement we have come to expect from businesses we adore.

January 28, 2008

SENDaBALL SENDSsomeLOVE

A few weeks ago, I wrote an online essay for Brandweek magazine where I referenced SENDaBALL as having an unconventional business service that requires its customers to think before they purchase. (Sending a ball through the mail, with no box ... just the ball. Huh? Really?) My reference included an embedded link to SENDaBALL.com. The other day a surprise landed in my mailbox — a SENDaBALL.

Sendaball

Michele, from SENDaBALL, followed up with an email thanking me after she noticed a bump in traffic to their website from my online essay. Mucho kudos to SENDaBALL. They monitor the blogosphere and acknowledge mentions in only a way SENDaBALL can.

What happens next? I blog about it and I also purchase two SENDaBALLs ... one for my niece and one for my nephew.

November 13, 2007

Chewy Marketing Quote

Peterdruckermarketingquote_2

November 07, 2007

The Fiskateers Movement

For over a year, Brains on Fire has been helping Fiskars, the scissors company, design a brand ambassador program called the Fiskateers. Last weekend I crashed their Fiskateers Roundup in San Antonio and witnessed the movement firsthand. Ladies sporting orange cowboy hats were all over the hotel and every one of these gals was toting a rolling scrapbook treasure chest of Fiskars goodies.

Geno, Spike, Carrie, and Virginia of Brains on Fire worked with Suzanne from Fiskars to put on one helluva weekend full of camaraderie, crafting, and cavorting.

In every session, Fiskateers shared their love for how scrapbooking tells the story of their lives. But more than that, these Fiskars evangelists expressed their love and appreciation for how Fiskars products help them tell better stories. It was amazing to hear how much these people ADORE Fiskars.

This program has not only profoundly impacted Fiskars, it has also profoundly impacted the marketing agency that designed the Fiskateers brand ambassador program.

On the Brains on Fire blog, Virginia Miracle talks about how she was faced with breaking the “fourth wall” of marketing during the Fiskateers Roundup. She writes,

“Breaking this fourth wall is both scary & exciting because we are making the rules as we go along. For example: do I put my Fiskateer number on my nametag or put Brains on Fire? (I erred on the side of over-disclosure and put both.) Do I wear a bright orange cowboy hat like the Nifty Fifty or stand back and take photos of the people wearing them? As a community manager and Fiskars evangelist in my off-time, I am as much as part of this program as I am trying to shape and support it.”

“I am as much as part of this program as I am trying to shape and support it.” Whoa! That’s a powerful line. And that’s a true partnership between client and agency.

Lots of agencies talk about forging partnerships with their clients. Most times that talk rings hallow. Not with Brains on Fire. As evidence by their work with Fiskars, they’ve designed a movement so powerful that it has moved Brains on Fire to become part of the movement. That is, to become genuine Fiskars brand ambassadors.

September 10, 2007

Conducting a Marketing Physical to Ensure Brand Health


NOTE: The post is meant more for attendees of the In-HOWse Designer Conference (Austin, TX).
On Monday, I delivered a presentation titled, Conducting a Marketing Physical To Ensure Brand Health.

The following is the presentation description that appeared in the Conference materials ...

It's time to give your business a marketing physical. This may sound strange, but it's just like going to your own doctor and getting a physical for yourself. The doc takes your vital signs, asks probing questions, and conducts a few key exams. You learn what may be affecting your health, and then you adjust your day-to-day life based on the results in an effort to ward off serious illnesses.

Why not do the same for your brand or business?

John Moore shows you how to conduct your marketing physical to diagnose and treat common marketing ailments like anemic sales, poor brand complexion and marketing obesity.


To view the slides, simply click the forward button below:


RSS Readers ... click here to view the presentation.

July 23, 2007

Small Business Marketing Seminar

Diy_marketing_2

My friend Jay Ehret is putting on a DIY Small Business Marketing Seminar in Killeen, TX on Wednesday, August 15.

He’s planning to give attendees all the know-how/how-to in developing and implementing effective marketing plans. If you live in and around the badlands of Central Texas, I suggest you consider attending.

Oh yeah, I’m closing the seminar with my BIGNESS OF SMALLNESS presentation.

Learn more here and here. Sign-up here.

February 02, 2007

Me Loves the “Wine That Loves” Labels

UPDATED (April 5th):
The Wine That Loves website is now online. And, BusinessWeek (SmallBiz edition) has an interesting piece on Wine That Loves.


For many of us, it’s intimidating to buy wine. Why? Come on, we know the reasons why. Most labels are obtuse. Styles are ill-defined. Pairing wine with food is utter guesswork. And prices can get super-spendy.

It takes an educated person to understand the information on wine labels from the appellation of origin to the grape varietal to its quality designation. Most of us cannot begin to articulate the differences between a Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Sirah, Pinot Noir, or Zinfindel. Pairing wine with food beyond knowing that white goes with fish and red goes with steak is a mystery for many. And most of us shudder to think of spending $60+ on a bottle of wine we’ve never heard of at a restaurant.

That’s the problem and the Amazing Food Wine Co. thinks they have the answer—easy to understand wine labels.

According to BrandWeek, the Amazing Food Wine Co. is launching a new wine brand called, Wine That Loves. This new wine brand “…takes the guesswork out of pairing wine with food. Thus, Wine That Loves Pizza, Wine That Loves Pasta, Wine That Loves Roasted Chicken, and so on."

Yep, it’s a wine marketing effort designed to make pairing wines with food a no-brainer. Serving Roasted Chicken with a Caribbean-style Mango Glaze... pair the dish with the "Wine That Loves Roasted Chicken" bottle. Very simple, very easy, and quite interesting, eh? Take a gander at the creatively straight-forward label design:

Wines_that_love3


Wine geeks do not like these labels
because details like grape varietal, vintage year, and growing region are not included and those details matter greatly to wine geeks. But this wine isn’t being made for wine geeks. It’s for all those folks who are either intimidated by selecting wines or unable to decipher the language intricacies of wine labels. And ya know what, there are more wine neophytes than there are wine geeks.

While these wine labels take a whimsical approach to communicating wine and refuse to get caught up in granular grape details, it's not like they are absent of information. On the back-side of each bottle is information which will help wine newbies gain a basic tasting vocabulary (tannins, acidity levels, etc.) from which to better describe the wine they are drinking.

So maybe, just maybe, after being introduced to wine with the “Wines That Loves” labels, these wine neophytes will begin their journey to understanding/appreciating wine and ultimately graduate to wine geek status.

Now, let’s hope the Amazing Food Wine Co. took as much time crafting the wine inside the bottle as they did in crafting the label on the outside of the bottle.


BTW … my Dad is a total wine geek. I’m curious to see if he is reading my blog and if he is, he’s sure to have an opinion on this post about wine. After all, he’s the guy with the know-it-all gene which was genetically bequeathed to me. John Moore calling Al Moore, come in Al...

September 12, 2006

Talking Shop with Jena McGregor of BusinessWeek

Last week Jena McGregor (BusinessWeek reporter) and I chatted about “authentic marketing.” This was in conjunction with the article BusinessWeek ran in its Sept. 18th issue detailing the recent marketing makeover at Safeway. You can access the audio of our conversation here but you might wanna familiarize yourself beforehand with the BusinessWeek story we reference in our chat.

BusinessWeek subscribers can read the article here, others can read the gist below …

The same-store sales pendulum at Safeway has swung from a negative 4.5% 2003 to a positive 4.3% in 2005. Safeway insiders are crediting its major renovation efforts as the reason for the dramatic change in sales.

Beginning in 2003, Safeway committed to spending billions of dollars to remodel all 1,775 of its stores. The remodeling efforts were more than just cosmetic as Safeway made a concerted effort to improve the quality of the food it stocks, as well as the quality of the experience it delivers to customers.

Perishables have been upgraded to include more organic offerings and exotic choices. Beef and poultry have been upgraded and the floral department has also undergone a significant quality upgrade. Additionally, Safeway enlisted the assistance of Orangetwice to remodel its stores to exude a much more authentic look and feel.

Safeway wisely waited until its stores were remodeled and its merchandise was upgraded before it began running its “Ingredients for Life” advertising campaign.


In our conversation, Jena and I touch upon the importance of going inside/out when brands undergo the renovation process. We also discuss how Whole Foods Market and Starbucks Coffee have it seemingly easier when it comes to “authentic marketing.” Plus, I share my thoughts on a few steps traditional mainstream brands can take to tell a more authentic story.

MicDOWNLOAD AUDIO HERE
[17:29 minutes | 8.3 MB]
Jena McGregor & John Moore chatting about Safeway, Whole Foods, Starbucks, and "authentic marketing."


June 16, 2006

Fiskars Crafting Ambassadors

While visiting with the Brains on Fire crew, they shared with me some work they're doing with Fiskars. I’ve only known Fiskars as a maker of scissors. But Fiskars is much more than a scissor maker. They are deep into the whole scrapbooking thing.

Did you know scrapbooking is a THREE BILLION DOLLAR business? (I didn’t.) Seems all the patterned paper, ribbons, scissors, fabrics, and embellishments add up to being a HUGE business. (Give this marketer a break for being scrapbook business ignorant. I’m a guy after all. Thanks.)

Anyway … Brains on Fire has helped Fiskars to identify some of its customer evangelists and in turn, crafted a Fiskars Brand Ambassador program cutely named, “Fiskateers.” Not only can other Fiskars evangelists become Fiskateers, they can also participate in a Fiskateers blog.

Fiskateers

On the just-launched blog, four Fiskateers are actively blogging and sharing their love for all things scrapbooking. Recent posts include Father’s Day book ideas and “get-well” love from Fiskars Sisters.

This Fiskateers Brand Ambassador program is a customer evangelism case study-in-the-making. Nice work Brains! And kudos to Fiskars for embracing customer evangelism.

March 20, 2006

Meaningful Marketing in Business Jurassic Jargon

I was called out by Tom Dixon for using fluent jargon in my meaningful marketing riff. Tom, who is seemingly blogless, makes a valid point. But at least the Marketing 2.0 jargon I used is easier to understand than this Business Jurassic 1.0a jargon-rich translation:

Meaningful marketing is about delivering impactful strategic multi-dimensional, best-in-class customer-focused marketing initiatives to deliver against the holistic mission of the enterprise all the while synergistically aligning with the brand’s signature DNA. It’s about capitalizing, in full totality, on consumers as being stakeholders in the monetization of the enterprise. It’s about expertly exploiting consumer mindshare opportunities; it’s about empowering consumers with value-add proprietary propositions; and it’s about maximizing results-driven customer relationship management infrastructure to elicit a seamless sustainable revenue competitive advantage.

For conversation purposes [Doh! … “conversation” is a Marketing 2.0 jargon-ish word -- sorry Tom] … below is my original definition for meaningful marketing which Tom Dixon called me out for.
Meaningful marketing is about designing marketing activities to deliver on the vision of the business all the while being smart, savvy, and authentic. It’s about treating consumers as being everyday explorers who seek to be interesting and interested. It’s about building preference more than awareness; going beyond capturing attention to soliciting intention; and it’s about fostering loyalty beyond reason from customers.

The Baking of Idea Ingredients

It’s astonishing—the ability of Blogs to infect me with ever-evolving ideas. For example … the other day I read Hugh riffing off a line he picked up from Doc Searls.

”Is the ‘Attention Economy’ just another way for advertisers to skewer eyeballs? And why build an economy around Attention, when Intention is where the money comes from?” [source: Doc Searls]

Dang Doc, that is chewy. Now I get to mash-up that tasty marketing morsel with other idea ingredients to help better bake my take on meaningful marketing.

I think I’ll add a dash of Sergio Zyman’s thinking that “awareness doesn’t sell—preference sells” with David Polinchock’s notion that instead of trying to hold audiences captive, we should strive to be captivating to audiences. Oh yeah, I should sprinkle some Lovemarks lingo atop of this mess as well. And after heating these idea ingredients in my marketing oven for thirty minutes at 425 degrees, this is my newly baked take on meaningful marketing

Meaningful marketing is about designing marketing activities to deliver on the vision of the business all the while being smart, savvy, and authentic. It’s about treating consumers as being everyday explorers who seek to be interesting and interested. It’s about building preference more than awareness; going beyond capturing attention to soliciting intention; and it’s about fostering loyalty beyond reason from customers. [source: Me and said influences]

September 01, 2005

The Most Important Word in Marketing?

Scott … that guy with the nametag … has started an interesting conversation about what the most important word is in marketing. I say AUTHENTICITY. Seth says RESPECT.

What say you? Share your word on Scott’s blog.


May 11, 2005

What Every Good Marketer Knows

Seth blogged it. Aaron designed it.

Seth_godin_1
download the PDF
[via BRANDPLAY by way of Seth Godin]

March 20, 2005

Scion's Co-Created Brand Hijack Attempt

“Thank you Scion for bringing out 70 musicians from Los Angeles to Austin. Show me a record company that is going to do that!”
-- Double G daKONDUCTOR from daKAH, a hip-hop orchestra --

On Saturday afternoon at SXSW, Scion, the upstart youthful skewing car brand from Toyota, pulled off a co-created brand hijack by staging a semi-exclusive free music showcase for daKAH, a 70 member strong hip-hop orchestra.

Dakah

Alex Wipperfurth, author of Brand Hijack, defines the co-created hijack as, “… the act of inviting subcultures to co-create a brand’s ideology, use, persona, and pave the road for adoption by the mainstream.” And yesterday, Scion seeded itself amongst an early adopter market of 750+ influential and leading edge musical provocateurs by providing them an experience they otherwise would not have experienced.

Double G daKONDUCTOR is right … no record company in its right mind would fly out 70 musicians for a 90-minute showcase. But daKAH is a band worthy of notice and it wouldn’t surprise me if daKAH becomes the next Polyphonic Spree. After all … it was SXSW 2002 where Polyphonic Spree was discovered by influential, leading edge musical provocateurs at a music showcase.

The question is … has Scion bet right and will daKAH blow-up like Polyphonic Spree did? And if daKAH does blow-up (as I think they will), how tightly associated will Scion be with music’s newest 'it' band?

December 18, 2004

Label Managers vs. Brand Managers

In a recent Brandweek editorial column, Jack Gordon, CEO of AcuPOLL Research, made some astute points in the 'the decline of brands' debate. The most poignant being …

What we might be seeing, in fact, is the decline of branding, not brands. The proliferation of line extensions, and the resulting effect of 'line-advertising;' the fact that over two-thirds of many brand budgets are now spent on consumer and trade promotions; and, reliance of many brands of 15-second ads has led to the creation of labels, not brands. [SOURCE: Brandweek | "Is it the Decline of Brands or the Decline of Branding?" | Dec. 6, 2004]

Have too many of us marketers become label managers and not brand managers?

Hmm ... that’s a great question to ask ourselves.