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February 10, 2006

Learning to Change

Alan Mitchell writes at Right Side Up about the difficulty of adapting old competencies and business practices to new market situations.

It is one thing, in the spirit of Ted Levitt, to declare that you are in the transportation business, not the railroad business. But it is quite another, to build a business to satisfy this broader demand.

Commenting on the FT's new year's editorial, Alan says :

"Real value-creating businesses do not revolve around abstractions like ‘music’ or ‘researched, edited information’. They revolve around the nitty-gritties: the exact bundle of value, how it is distributed, purchased and used, at what cost and for what revenues: all the things that are increasingly not the same. The market for quality information may well grow. Whether it grows within the framework of an institution like the FT is a very different matter indeed."

He's right, of course. In the grand scheme of things the question is not whether the skills of FMCG marketing may or may not transfer to a B2B environment. But whether either transfers to a flexible, unbundled, collaborative (add more 'modern' adjectives of your choice) person-centric environment.

The question is not what Citibank can learn from Kelloggs, but what both can learn from E-Bay? Or Google? Or MyOffers? or Skype?

In the end, It is not revolutions that pose a threat for brand marketers, but 'disruptive continuity' - the sort of continuity that makes physical albums, and pre-printed books increasingly redundant.

As P&G's CMO James Stengel is quoted as saying: " The traditional marketing model we all grew up with is obsolete."

If so, it is incumbent upon marketers to use their abundant imagination to replace it, rather than defend the status quo.

January 4, 2006

The shelf life of a fresh pair of eyes

Many Individuals and corporations alike look forward to Christmas as a chance to catch their collective breath after another busy year, reflect and resolve their approaches to the next 12 months.

With recharged batteries and renewed vigour, we optimistically bound into January to March each year like it's our first hundred days. Of course, it never is. Two weeks in and the holidays will be all but a distant memory, barring the extra few pounds that remind you overindulgence was only too recent. We slip all too easily into familiar patterns and behaviours.

2006 could be different: This holiday, I finished one book and read another. "Who Moved my Blackberry" (Lukes/Kellaway) and "Hello Laziness" (Maier) have both forced a fresh - if somewhat irreverant - perspective of the industry in which we work and, with a bit of luck, I might make it into February before life returns to normal.

Sitting in a client meeting yesterday, receiving a brief to develop a strategic, customer-driven growth framework for a fast-developing category of technologically enabled, rich, multi-media content (you can see where this is going) I was prompted to reflect on how valuable the first hundred days are for seeing the world in a way that you never will again.

As I marvelled in the meeting at the acronyms and the sheer inaccessibility of the language and concepts, I thought to myself how in a few weeks this will all feel familiar and how the perspective I can take on the problem today is fleeting.

We've learned from our research of the importance of using the F100D to stop, listen and learn. Your trusted, time-proven models of marketing may not work here. But how long does this precious state of ignorance last? How long before we are tainted by insider knowledge, before we assimilate the company's history, language and cultural norms?

What is the shelf life of a fresh pair of eyes?

December 20, 2005

FMCG thinking in B2B

Hat-tip to Seth Godin, for a really neat illustration of just what it means to transfer FMCG 'scarcity' thinking...to the B2B arena.

Here is the office of Creative Artists, the Hollywood talent agency which charges millions of dollars to make phone calls, negotiate contracts and have lunch with Studio directors. As Seth puts it: "They could just as easily do their jobs in some trailer park..."

The office of Creative Artists

He continues: "if you don't think tone of voice and storytelling matters when selling to business, take a second to check out their entire website (it won't take long)": Creative Artists Agency.

Story-telling and emotional selling is just as big a deal in b2b!

18% of marketers make it to the top

It's an old statistic.but a good indicator, that just 18 per cent of CEOs have a background that's marketing-biased.

According to this piece from the AMA, financial skills, strategic insight, and internal visibility, are critical to reaching the CEO's office.

December 1, 2005

Marketing Ageism. Prejudice? or Pragmatism?

Experience is good, right? In F100D, your CV is your record of achievement. You are what you have learned. Most experience is transferrable. The CEO's first recruitment question is often "Where have you done this before?".

But marketing does not always follow this logic..

As a society, we may be getting (dramatically) older, but the marketing profession continues to revere and reward the young and energetic. It values freshness over faithfulness.

This knee-jerk reverence for youth is not just an issue for marketers themselves, but can affect their judgement and treatment of customers too.

As David Wolfe says: "With US adults 40 and older now outnumbering younger adults by 128 to 85 million, ageism has become a serious challenge in consumer marketing because the antipathy of young creatives toward aging can unconsciously find its way into marketing messages. Even the venerable AARP unwittingly projects ageism in its new tagline, “60 is the new 30�.

Is he overstating things? Surely we marketers are above such stereotyping? Well, maybe. If you fancy a bit of fun, try this little test on social attitudes