Branding : Three Phases of Evolution
Tom Asacker, author of A Clear Eye for Branding and judge for the Innovation Challenge writes...
Since
the beginning of business creation, successful brands have gone through three
phases of evolution: mystery, model, and method. Mystery is the “I wonder . . .?” phase: “I
wonder if people will purchase an automobile if I can get the price down to
‘x’?” The next phase is the model phase
. . . a messy, imperfect process: “Let me try to produce an automobile for
‘x.’” Once the model phase has proven
out the mystery--“Wow! They WILL buy it.”---successful
brands quickly move into the methods phase: “How can I produce enough
automobiles at the target price to fulfill demand, and make a profit while doing
so?” Some are driven by insights
regarding a market opportunity like Henry Ford, while others, like Michael Dell,
are simply trying to stay ahead of the competition and remain profitable. Either way, a brand is
born.
The problems arise when successful brands
move to the madness phase, as they refine
their method to the point of marketplace indifference. Donald Sull put it this way in Revival of the
Fittest: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Managers Remake Them: “Over
time, unchanging relationships can turn into shackles that limit an
organization's flexibility and lock it into active inertia. Established relationships with customers can
prevent firms from responding effectively to changes in technology, regulations,
or consumer preferences.” As we witness
the demise of one great brand after another in today’s tumultuous marketplace,
it may appear that the realities of building a strong brand have changed. In fact, the problem is that many successful
executives simply can’t see the changing marketplace forest for their brand
trees.
Henry
Ford was guilty of this myopia in his day. He was so convinced that his low-cost, mass production method caused the
masses to buy his automobiles, that he was blinded by hubris to the mysteries of
the changing marketplace. Henry’s
response to multiple requests for a different color automobile: “You can have
any color you want as long as it’s black.” Black was an integral part of Henry’s refined method, because black paint
dried faster than other paint colors. This enabled Henry to keep his manufacturing costs--and
market price--where
he believed they had to be to cause people to buy.
We
all know what happened next: Alfred P. Sloan and General Motors entered the
picture. While Ford moved to the madness
phase with further refinement of his scientific methods, GM vigilantly mulled
over a new mystery: “I wonder if customers will pay more for a red or blue
automobile?” The answer was a resounding
“Yes.” and after implementing the methods to profitably support that answer, GM
rapidly rose to become Ford’s arch-rival. This is a simplified version of historical events, however we see this
pattern played out over and over again in the annals of brand
evolution.
In
the late 19th and early 20th centuries--when
the mysteries of brand creation were abundant and fairly
obvious--entrepreneurs
like Henry Heinz asked questions like: “I wonder if people will buy my relish if I remove the dirt and place it
in a glass jar so people can see that it’s full? And if they will, I’ll quickly develop a
profit-making method for producing, labeling and promoting it.” Brands of those days¾of
soap powder, flour, grain foods, condiments, etc.--became
symbols of quality and consistency. Like
all successful brands, they were products of their time, place and
culture.
Fast-forward
a half-century to the boom decade after World War II. In the 1950’s, the average grocer carried
about 2,000 different products, compared to the tens of thousands in today’s
supermarket. And most of those products
were heavily advertised, branded products since the more successful the brand,
the more shelf space it took up. By
publicizing their USP’s to a fairly homogeneous market on network television,
companies were able to convince consumers to buy their secret brand formulas
thus perpetuating this advertising driven consumption cycle. It was a very effective method for that time,
since back then if you repeated your message often enough, a large number of
naive people would believe you.
It
was around that time that models were being developed to answer the mystery, “I
wonder what people want to eat and how they want to eat it?” One successful model was the MacDonald’s
brother’s quick food restaurant in California US
And
so did Motorola in the mid 1990’s. While
Motorola was refining its method to get to 3.4 defects per million opportunities
in its cell phone manufacturing process, a Finnish company with virtually no
technology marketing expertise in the US was answering a new customer mystery:
“I wonder if people will buy cell phones if they look more like fashion
accessories.” Nokia not only answered
that question, but it has gone on to become one of the world’s dominant brands
in digital technologies, including mobile phones, telecommunications networks,
wireless data solutions and multimedia terminals.
Are
you beginning to see the pattern? All
20th century brand successes evolve from mystery to method, and many
have since moved into--and
out of--the
madness phase: from Henry Ford with the assembly line to P & G with brand
management and TV advertising, to Sears with its retail method, to the legacy
airlines with the madness of their high-cost method, artificially preserved with
government support. Even Howard
Schultz’s method (Starbucks), which scaled the affirmative answer to the mystery
he conceived on a business trip--“I
wonder if people in Seattle
The 21st century is an unprecedented time of marketplace mysteries (albeit not quite as obvious as the early 20th century): “I wonder how people want to buy music?” “I wonder how consumers want to interact with web based advertising? “I wonder what people want to listen to on free radio?” “I wonder how consumers want to purchase financial services?” “I wonder . . . ?” But instead of developing models to explore the mysteries, most established brands are moving into the madness phase as they place more and more emphasis and pressure on their worn out methods. Successful brands will continue to come and go, but the great ones will discover answers to--and methods to leverage--the new marketplace mysteries of their time.
Tom,
I hope you don't mind that I created a link from my blog to this entry. Its just so bang on. I am partnered with Mitch Joel to create a great new brand experience for our consumers and am just learning about the democratization of marketing and how consumers can get to share ownership with a brand from which a certain expectation has been created. Thanks for this gem.
Sass Peress
CEO, ICP Solar
www.icpsolar.com
Posted by: Sass Peress | October 23, 2005 at 08:48 PM
I am looking for the answers to MY marketplace mysteries... and I am sure that I will find them...
It's my personal challenge :)
I am following Garvin's footsteps!!!
Posted by: Dialy | October 12, 2005 at 07:54 PM