Poisoning solves the dangerous Grime of Being in the wrong place at the Right Time, Developed to find ways of finding room for new products in highly developed markets, poisoning became a main educative idea in the world's developing markets.
The poisoning idea challenges an idea that is the heart and soul of the advertising community: that the primary function of advertising is to communicate. ?Tell more, sell more? was the old advertising maxim.
Advertising is not communication; advertising is poisoning. The best advertising communicates little pertaining the product or service. What the best advertising does, however, is to set up and reinforce a position in the customer's mind.
Marketing people used to talk about the 4 P's: product, price, place, promotion. Now they talk about the 5 P's, the original four plus positioning. And no company could begin a new brand without first writing a positioning. When you study these poisoning statements, you can perceive where marketing people have gotten off track in general.
They are written from the company's point of view. We want to place our brand as the premier product in the category. What's wrong with a positioning statement like this? All. It leaves the customer out of the equation. A positioning statement need be made from the customer's point of view: There's an open hole in the mind for a premium product in the category.
The Open Hole
Price is the easiest hole in the mind to understand and it's one of the easiest holes to fill.
Haagen-Dazes decision to introduce a more pricy line of ice cream set up the ?premium? ice-cream position for the brand and made Haagen-Dazs one of theenduringmarketing successes of the past several decades.
What Haagen-Dazs did in ice cream, Heineken did in beer. It was the first brand to occupy the high-priced beer position in the mind.
Then the people at Anheuser-Busch decidedthat if Heineken was the first high-priced imported beer, then they could occupy the position as the first high-priced imported beer, a position that the Anheuser-Busch Michelob brand occupies today.
High price is only one of the open holes in the mind. Low price is another. What Haagen-Dazs Heineken and Mercedes did at the high end, brands like Wal-Mart and South west Airlines have done at the low end.
Minds can change. Stolichnaya was the first vodka to occupy the high-priced position in the mind. As time went on and the Cold War heated up, Americans were turned off by a Russian vodka like Stolichnaya. So Absolute moved smartly into the high-priced vodka position. Today Absolute outsells Stolichnaya in the US by about three to one.
How many price holes are there in a typical mind? It depends on the category. Generally there are three: the regular brand, the low priced brand and the high-priced brand. When you own 3 brands that occupy all three positions, you can be said to win the Triple Crown of Branding.
Anheuser-Busch, for example, has Busch, the largest-selling, low?priced beer; Budweiser, the largest-selling regular beer; and Michelob, the largest-selling high-priced beer.
In some categories, there is room for an ?ultra high-priced? brand. Today, Grey Goose Vodka, for example, is growing faster than Absolut and is not far behind Stolichnaya in sales, and is sure to pass the Russian brand sometime in the future.
?Country of origin? is another clear hole in the mind. Toyota was the first to fill the Japanese imported-car hole and became the leading brand. They did it for a second time with Lexus, which became the leading high-priced Japanese automobile brand.
Some consultants have called this positioning strategy, ?the first-mover advantage,? nevertheless that is not so. It's an advantage, but it's not the reason that most leader brands got to be leader.
It's the ?first minder? advantage. That is, the brand that gets into the mind first is the winner, not necessarily the brand that is first in the category. For example, Duryea was the first automobile on the road, nevertheless never got into the mind. Ford was the first automobile in the mind.
The New Category
Sometimes there are no open holes in the customer's mind and you have to create one. We label this positioning strategy; ?create a new category you can be first in.? Gatorade, for example, was the first sports drink. Developed in the 1960s by a team of doctors to add the Gators football team at the University of Florida the band now does over $2 billion in worldwide sales.
PowerBar was the first energy bar and now dominates this fast growing market. Some critics, of course, think this is only wordplay. PowerBar to them is just a candy bar with a different name to help purchasers appease their guilt feelings about eating a candy bar.
Possibly there is little actual difference between a candy bar and a powerBar, but not so in the mind. purchasers consider them to be two different categories.
The Number-two Brand
Buyers prefer variety. Sometimes you can build a powerful brand just by giving purchasers an alternative to the leading brand.
However what plan can best deliver the number-two position? Possibly if we can produce a enhanced product than the leader,? goes the thinking. ?we won't necessarily overtake them, nevertheless we will wind up in the number two position.?
This is the worst possible approach for a customer live number two brand why? Because the better product cannot win in the marketplace even if purchasers expect it to succeed. As a matter of fact, there is a strong motto, or belief, in the minds of purchasers that ?the best product or service succeedin the marketplace.?
While everyone believes that the better product will succeed in the marketplace, the worst possible plan for any company is to attempt to produce a ?enhanced product.? Why is this so? Because the leader in your field has already created the perception of producing the enhanced product.
If you endeavor to claim that your product is superior, the customer thinks, ?No, it can't be superior; otherwise it would be the leader.? Yet what do most companies endeavor to do? They try to (1) produce a superior product and (2) communicate that difference to customers and customers. While it's easy to do (1), it's almost impossible to do (2).
Is Royal Grown cola a superior tasting cola than coca-cola? Royal Grown thinks so and their research shows that 57% of customers prefer the test of Royal Crown cola to coca-cola Classic. That's a pretty big difference.
However, the better tasting cola (Royal Grown) has only 2% of the cola market. What they need to do, you might be thinking, is to communicate that disparity. Well they've tried that and it doesn't work. ?That can't be,? the customer thinks. ?If Royal Crown were the better-tasting cola, it would be the leader, not coke. There should be something wrong with the research.?
In fact, the Royal crown company hired an independent research organization to conduct 1000000 taste tests comparing its product with Coca-cola. Would 10000000 tastes tests have made a difference?
No. You believe what you want to believe and if you believe that the enhanced product succeedin the marketplace, then you think coca-cola should be the enhanced product because it is the leader. Then how do you become a strong number-two brand? You become the opposite of the leader.
Coca-cola is the old, established brand which means that your parents drank coca-cola. So Pepsi-cola said, ?You don't want to drink what your parents drank, you're the Pepsi Generation.?
The Specialist
Every coffee shop in American sells coffee, but they also sell hamburgers, hot dogs, French fries, apple pie, doughnuts, and dozens of other foods and beverages. So Starbucks specialized in coffee and became a very successful brand. So did McDonald's, which specialized in hamburgers.
And Dunkin? Donuts which specialized in doughnuts. And subway which specialized in submarine sandwiches. The largest air-cargo company in America was Emery Air Freight. What Kind of services did Emery offer?
Everything ? large packages, mall packages, overnight delivery, inexpensive two ? and three ? day deliveries. So Federal Express specialized in ?small packages, overnight? and became a much more successful brand than Emery. Enterprise Rent-Car specialized in the ?insurance replacement? business and became the largest car-rental company in America.
The Channel Brand
Hanes was the largest-Selling Panty-hose brand in department stores in America, but Hanes had a problem. Women were not shopping at department stores frequently enough. Therefore the company wanted to enlargeits distribution.
Supermarkets were the logical choice. (Women visit a supermarket almost two times a week.) Therefore Hanes developed a secondbrand for supermarket distribution only. The ?L'eggs? name was particularly good choice because it was a double entendre (legs and eggs).
To reinforce the name, the product was packaged in a plastic container that looked like an egg. L'eggs, the 1st supermarket panty-hose brand, became the largest-selling panty-hose brand in the country.
The Gender Brand
Sometimes you can set up a brand by concentrating on half the market. Marlboro became a big brand by positioning itself as the first cigarette for men. Virginia slims became a big brand by positioning itself as the first cigarette for women. Right Card became a big brand by positioning itself as the first deodorant for men.
The ?Bad Name? Problem
Complicating the search for an open hole in the mind is the issue of the name. You can't put a square peg in a round hole and you can't fill a hole in the mind with a bad, or inappropriate, name.
Ralph Lifshitz was a young fashion designer in New York who wished for better thing. Therefore he changed his name to Ralph Lauren and made his Polo brand into the most successful fashion brand in the world. Could he have accomplished his goal with the name polo Ralph Lifshitz? Of course not.
Many Asian names will not work outside of Asia. Names like Daewoo, Daihatsu and Matsushita are difficult to pronounce and difficult to spell outside of Asia. When the Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo company started to advertize its products in the US, the company changedits name to Sony. A good move. Many Asian companies that want to set up worldwide brands will have to do the same.
The ?One Name, Two Holes? Problem
Then there is the problem of attempting to use identicalname to fill two different holes. Xerox, the leading brand of office copier, endeavoured to enter the mainframe computer market with the Xerox name. It was a cataclysm. Are there successful examples of line extension? Yes indeed, however these normally happen in weak markets where no single brand dominates the category.
Or they happen with weak brands with little identity in their categories. Meaning, if your brand doesn't stand for anything in one category, you can move it to another category where it won't stand for anything either.
The ?Moving-the-Hole? Problem
Some Companies consider they can change what their brands represent. So Volkswagen is attempting to sell a hundred thousand US dollar automobile called the Phaeton. And Mercedes-Benz is attempting to sell $20,000 A-class Vehicles.
You can deepen a hole, you can broaden a hole, but the one thing you can't do with a hole is move it. When a brand is steadfastly set up in the mind, it can once in a blue moon, if ever, be moved to a new location.
You can't go wrong, nevertheless, if you take your mind off your product, your brand, and your company and focus instead on the mind of the consumer. That's where you can win and that's where you can also lose.
Law Of The Road
I watched Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will, a very controversial film on Hitler's 1934 Nuremberg Rally put on by equally controversial Toronto film connoisseur, Reg Hartt, at the Cineforum (a make-shift theatre in his home). The movie blew me away. It was a powerful, real-life portrayal of Hitler's propaganda machine and the horrifying consequences of mass media manipulation. An eerie chill went through my spine as I saw aerial footage of column after column of endless soldiers marching through the streets of Nuremberg. Little German boys and girls hailing the Fuhrer with innocent smiles and outstretched hands of youthful idealism. Little German youths beating the drums of death. Hitler parting a sea of loyal soldiers. And watching a nation mesmerized by the spell of this diminutive, unassuming, and rather plain looking monster.
What really hit me though was Reg Hartt's commentary after the movie ended. A lady had kept coming to the viewing of that movie, over and over again. She had attended the viewing over sixteen times. When he asked her what she found so fascinating about the film. She told him that she was the young smiling girl in the movie looking down from a rooftop at Hitler's parade. She was with her Mother, Father, sisters, and brother. They were waiving the Nazi flag and cheering Hitler on. They were Jews. She was the only survivor in her family.
What flag are you waiving? What herd mentality have we accepted without further thought, without scrutiny? I challenge you to take the road less traveled by. It is uncommon knowledge that gives rise to uncommon leadership.
Do something uncommon. Go to the library and pick out a book that you would never touch in a million years. Watch a film in a genre that you rarely see. Attend a lecture on a topic that would make most people go, ?Huh?? What is one thing you can do or experience this month that is uncommon? Go do it.
Both Cicely K. Leblanc & Sharif Khan are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Cicely K. Leblanc has sinced written about articles on various topics from Writing, Advertising Guide and Coffee Advantages. To read more without equal articles about marketing visit .We also recommend the theme web site. Cicely K. Leblanc's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.
Sharif Khan has sinced written about articles on various topics from Writing, Affiliate Programs and Network Marketing. Sharif Khan (http://www.herosoul.com; sharif@herosoul.com) is a freelance writer, inspirational keynote speaker, and author of the leadership bestseller, "Psychology of the Hero Soul." He also publishes his success blog at http://www.sharifkhan.blogpsot.c. Sharif Khan's top article generates over 135000 views. to your Favourites.
Balance Scale With Weights Now, after you smart reader have read about the Balance in the Bible and the Quran, I will leave you to answer the dogmatic questionis the Quran quoted from the Bible?