by Jonathan Salem Baskin on 6 November, 2009 - 22:57
Have you noticed that most conversations about branding inevitably include references to Harley-Davidson and Apple? Sprinkle in mentions of Coke, Facebook, and Zappos, and you get the context of every agency pitch for more spending on brand engagement, loyalty, or whatever else these examples might suggest.
I suggest you ban these references from your next conversation. Forget about them altogether.
Marketing's dim science lets itself get distracted and misled by the stand-outs and exceptions. It's no surprise, since we're in the standing-out business (and think of ourselves as quite exceptional, thank you very much), but we tend to read a lot of meaning into uniquely complex accomplishments that can't be copied because of their unique complexity:
Yet these are the very examples that we see featured in new business presentations and industry conclaves. They're visual, often fun, and speak to our desires to deliver emotions and other intangible values; brand identity is what makes what we make different from what others make. This is the guiding principle so amply (and repeatedly) illustrated by the exceptions...the stand-outs that "do it right," and which we should try to duplicate.
Only we can't, for two primary reasons:
And we wonder why so many marketing campaigns fail to live up to our expectations?
Scientists know that you have to take outlier data out of any experiment for risk of skewing or simply confusing the results. We see the impact of allowing political discourse to be run by extreme, absolute positions. A soprano's highest note is considered a peak and not the home of her range. You get the idea.
So why still do we try to understand brands by studying the anomalies?
Image source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/httpwwwmouthshutcomusermariner2html/3219486733/
Original Post: http://dimbulb.typepad.com/my_weblog/2009/11/forget-about-harley-and-apple.html
This blog reflects the personal opinions of individual contributors and does not represent the views of Futurelab, Futurelab's clients, or the contributors' respective employers or clients.
Daniel Serra says:
08 Nov 2009, 17:04
Great!
I tend to discard a potential candidate to a marketing job when most of the examples and references come from the Apples, Nikes and Cokes.
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