21st March 2006 by Anders Gronstedt
The Pinko Marketing Manifesto is on to something, a few highlights:
Commie Marketing is about the end of the Marketing Manager, Director and anyone else who thinks they have control over the message, market or ‘brand’
Having a corporate blog does NOT mean that you get it. In fact, it mostly means that you don’t.
The voices of the community, your employees and your competitors are more valuable than anything you could ever say. Listen. No…really…listen.
Put down the marketing plan and walk away slowly. It’ll be alright. I know. You have a tough job ahead of you. It’s called killing your inner control freak. I have the same issue.
Everyone is a marketer. They were right! All these years that I fought that and they were right! Everyone does it. I feel so much better…
Database marketing was when the marketers had the databases and the customers didn’t. Now the customers have caught up in the information technology race and they can link, subscribe, aggregate, recommend, block, and filter faster than marketers can track them.
Frame it in your cublicle, or better yet, help edit it on their Wiki.
Posted in Branding defined | Comments Off
19th March 2006 by Anders Gronstedt
One of my favorite sources of consumer opinion is PlanetFeedback, a public clearing house for customer complaint letters. Occasionally, a customer sends a letter of complement to PlanetFeedback. I did a search for one of my favorite brands, Starbucks, and found that they had over 100 letters of complements! Over one hundred Starbucks customers have had a good enough experience that they took the time to log on to PlanetFeedback, open an account, and write about the positive brand experience for the world to read! And that’s not all. Anyone can write a comment to a letter, much like anyone can write a comment to this blog entry. Most of the comments to the complaint letters at PlanetFeedback are written by other customers who are blowing off steam about similar problems. Not in Starbucks’ case. Most of the customer complaint letters have comments by regular Starbucks employees who weigh in to defend their employer!
Take this letter about an inconsistency in Starbucks pricing: A customer argues that a Tall latte with a second shot of espresso is more expensive at the Starbucks in her airport than a Grande, which has two shots of espresso. Both comments to the letter starts with, “I work for Starbucks and…” One of them is by a part-time employee. They explain that this must be an isolated case at this particular airport location because the extra shot of espresso is not normally that expensive. How about that for devoted brand ambassadors? I don’t know if Starbucks has an organized program to mobilize its employees to defend the brand in online forums, or if it’s a spontaneous outpouring of support for a brand they love. All I know is that no other brand that I know of have as many complement letters on PlanetFeedback and no other brand is defended as tenaciously by its own employees.
Think about the brand you work for: Do you have customer evangelists writing about positive brand experiences at PlanetFeedback? Do you monitor complaints at these kinds of sites? Do you have an army of employee brand ambassadors ready to defend the brand or explain the situation when you get negative consumer generated stories?
Posted in Brand Leaders, Employee Branding, Viral Branding | Comments Off
15th March 2006 by Anders Gronstedt
Absolut vodka is probably the best brand a government agency ever created (every bottle you buy benefits the taxpayers of my native Sweden!). Leave it to the Swedish government agents to crack code of successful product placement.
Posted in Brand Leaders | Comments Off