April 27th, 2012
One must contemplate the distinction between branding and rebranding. Rebranding is often miscast as an exercise in repairing one’s reputation. Some rebranding efforts focus on mitigating a negative image (such as Philip Morris’s name change to Altria or AIG’s move of their advisory business to Sagepoint). Yet rebranding may also represent subtle changes in positioning, or the recasting of visual identify, such as Starbucks recent move to a more contemporary look.
If you’re thinking about rebranding your company, bear in the mind the following considerations:
Seek out simplification-Today’s rebranding efforts are often a function of providing clarity to the marketplace and removing brand confusion. Citi’s recent rebranding removed a single word (if the word bank is in your name, it may not be a bad idea to remove it). Our cluttered market values simplicity.
Leverage Social Media from the ground up- Within our firm, we recently rebuilt our website, refreshed our brand, and printed new business cards (including a QR code). All of our marketing includes embedded social media components, with the intent of driving traffic to our website where prospects can experience various multimedia tools that are featured online.
Use emotional triggers-Google famous Parisian Love ad (when an American finds love in Paris) is a classic example of using emotional messaging to capture the imagination of your audience. All marketing should utilize emotional triggers.
Enter new markets- Pabst Blue Ribbon, perceived as an also-ran in the U.S. rebranded in China as an ultra-premium American lager (PBR) and is selling for upwards of $44 a bottle (the Chinese may not have everything figured out).
Reshape perceptions about quality-Rebranding should not appear cosmetic or contrived. Harley Davidson’s slide in perceived quality in the 80’s was magnified by stiff competition from Japanese competitors. The company’s drastic repositioning included a return to its core products and the formation of the Harley Owners Group (HOG’s), which reestablished Harley a bad boy brand.
Identify unmet needs- Your offer may need to change as the utility of your product or the benefits that differentiate it may shift over time. Marketers will often use a tag line when they wish to preserve their brand equity, and point out new features or benefits.
Use professionals- Rebranding can back fire when companies draw attention to their marketing. Many smaller companies try to utilize self service template web sites and similar home grown tools that come off as……home grown. Marketing requires constant investment. Hire people who can assist you with both messaging and technology.
Understand the hard and soft costs- Change can be expensive, given the need to reprint, re-sign, change email addresses, etc. Consider all your hard and soft costs (including management team band) with as you refresh your brand.
Organizations often under appreciate the importance of branding. In this world of hyper-competition, the way you communicate the nuances of your brand are more important than ever.
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Posted by Marc Emmer - President - Optimize Inc.
March 8th, 2012
Organizations find a cadence for planning and execution. For some, planning their business is rhythmic and routine, and for others more ad-hoc and choppy.
The discipline required to be successful at strategic planning is not innate in the human condition. It requires creating methods, habits and norms that perpetuate a desired process, and that takes energy and patience only employed by the best CEO’s. Such habits will rarely occur without the complete buy-in of senior management.
The only way to establish such discipline is to have a repeatable process. Best-in-class organizations typically have multiple strategy events per year. For some, perhaps it is an annual retreat and quarterly follow-ups. For others, it is a semi-annual retreat followed by monthly check-ins that focus on execution. It is not as important what system you use for strategic thinking, as it is that you have a system you can commit to.
Once such a methodology is understood, certain norms begin to take form. Mid-management can rationalize their contribution to the greater good and develop their own methods for applying the strategy to their organizations. For many companies, strategic planning includes:
- Gathering research about the market and operating environment
- Gathering input from front line staff
- Gathering additional information about their current state
- Formulating the mission, values, vision, goals and strategic initiatives
- Conveying the mission, values, vision, goals and initiatives to their employees
- Establishing departmental goals and infrastructure requirements necessary to implement the strategy
- Creating a performance management system that is in alignment with the company’s core competencies
- Measuring the effectiveness of execution in real time
Many organizations have such a cascading routine for budgeting, and the same thinking applies to the formation and execution of strategy. Often the strategy discussion precedes the budgetary process and the timing of the two are linked. It is for this reason that one cannot think of planning as a single event (such as an “off-site”) but as a cycle. As such, your plan is never really complete—it is a working document that must continue to change as new market conditions present new threats and opportunities.
Organizations also need to change things up to foster new thinking. Some meetings can be structured and organized and others need to be free-flowing brainstorming sessions.
Whatever your process, provide an environment that will guarantee that your team continues to think about the broader picture and how you can maintain your strategic advantage.
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Posted by Marc Emmer - President - Optimize Inc.
June 28th, 2011
The long term implications of Japan’s massive earthquake and tsunami have recently begun to materialize. Over the course of the last twenty years, management principles have centered on efficiency; do more with less. Six Sigma, Lean Manufacturing, outsourcing, and off-shoring have boomed. Perhaps our fascination with reducing costs and optimizing return on assets has manifested in an overly minimalistic view of the world.
The recent supply chain disruptions have illustrated the vulnerability of our thinking as just in time translated into late product shipments, unsatisfied customers, and sluggish earnings, spanning from Toyota to Tiffany’s. The vulnerability may be far greater for smaller companies with less sophisticated logistics and reliance on a smaller web of suppliers.
Thus the central question is shifting away from what is the minimum possible cycle time to what are the supply chain risks and how can they be mitigated? Manufacturers have had to adapt, in some cases reengineering their products to use components or materials that have been suddenly unavailable. Some product development teams have had to adapt, at times looking like a scene from Apollo 13 (when astronauts famously had to construct a part based on the materials they had on hand).
Customers have the right to ask more questions about how their vendors manage supply and what types of contingencies they have in place. As has been evident in recent years, vendors and customers alike must think broadly about what eventualities could disrupt the global marketplace and collaborate on solutions. The horrific events in Japan reflect only the latest in a series of events that are reshaping how products come to market.
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Posted by Marc Emmer - President - Optimize Inc.
March 30th, 2011
Being Opportunistic in a Volatile World
Last week my post drew considerable attention, perhaps because of its shock value at a time when the news was truly shocking. While the tsunami was a natural disaster, the response on the part of the Tokyo Electric Company was a human calamity. Lack of preparation will invariably lead to unintended consequences, if you are managing a nuclear power plant or any other business.
The reverse is also true. The entrepreneur capable of understanding seemingly unrelated external forces, and weaving them into a thoughtful strategy, will clearly realize strategic advantage. How might the strategist consider social, technological, economic, ecological and political factors to gain insight on how to take advantage of ever changing market conditions?
Scenario planning is a methodology whereby the entrepreneur considers converging factors that (in combination) creates a tipping point. Consider some of the following predictions, based on facts already in evidence today.
In the next decade, we are likely to see:
Predicative Modeling-Cloud computing enables the migration and cross-referencing of large institutional databases. For example, actuaries, using sophisticated algorithms are able to model ailments based on lifestyle choices monitored in real time. They are able to calculate your risk of a heart attack based on which smoothie you tend to order at Jamba Juice, your frequency of exercise, prescriptions you use, etc. Offered as a benefit of a health care plan, the member is offered incentives to opt-in and receive preferential rates. Such tools slow down rampant health care inflation.
A Cashless Society-The majority of transactions amongst big banks are managed by exchanges where no money actually changes hands. Coins of small denomination are nearing extinction. Today, you can download an iPhone app that serves as a debit card, and can be swiped within Starbucks locations. For most transactions, cash is already irrelevant.
Smart Infrastructure- Automobiles come preinstalled with all of the features of an iPad (the 2011 Hyundai Equus will come with one) and all the benefits of the internet. Smart grids control the flow of traffic, directing drivers to particular lanes at a given speed to optimize drive time and reduce accidents. Traffic signals are regulated based on traffic volume. Sensors predict bridge and rail failures.
Of course, rapid change will occur in every industry, and the strategist must weigh various opportunities based on an organization’s ability to take advantage of them. As a general rule, organizations should seek to achieve scale and reach within its core (at least 30% market share) before expanding into new endeavors. As Jim Collins points out in his sequel to Good to Great (How the Mighty Fall), many companies fail because of an “Undisciplined Pursuit of More”. In their zeal for diversification they often leap too far from their core competency.
Each opportunity must be assessed within the context of the organization’s resources, bandwidth, and human capital. For every opportunity there is a cost, and an opportunity cost. To pursue any new opportunity an organization must leverage resources which dilutes focus on the core business. Choose your opportunities carefully.
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Posted by Marc Emmer - President - Optimize Inc.
March 1st, 2011
The protesters marched on the highway, despondent about rapid inflation. They shut down the thoroughfare for hours. 1000 miles away, protesters flocked the capital and drove the legislators to safe haven in neighboring territories.
These were fundamentalists in Tunisia or Libya; they were students in California and state workers in Wisconsin.
The impetus for civil unrest in the Middle East is that of the “lost generation” of unemployed misdirected youth. In some regions of the world, unemployment is 40% or more. In the U.S. , it is not just the young that face underemployment but generations of workers whose skills have become irrelevant. The U.S. has the western world’s widest income distribution. The Top 10% make 6 times that of the bottom 10%, compared to 4.2 X for Great Britain and 2.8 X for Sweden[i]. The labor market has hollowed, as wages earned by shop floor workers have actually declined (when adjusted for inflation) over the last two decades.
The labor imbalance in the U.S. has far reaching implications, not only for the unemployed but for our economy as a whole. The inability of low wage earners to consume is a strain on U.S. growth.
While there is plenty of banter about the need for jobs, there is no systematic solution in place for retraining American workers such as displaced auto and steel workers. President Obama has called on U.S. business leaders to: “generate ideas for creating jobs, sustaining the economic recovery and making America more competitive”[ii].
Of course the notion of “creating jobs” is a little too convenient. Jobs are created when there is a need for them, and Americans get the jobs when they offer the most value. The problem is not that there are not enough jobs; it is that the cost-benefit for the employer often tips towards off-shoring. If our workers do not offer enough value in the form of specialized knowledge, ability to use technology, etc., jobs will continue to be shipped overseas.
This is not a protectionist rant, and my comments aren’t intended to incite a riot on free trade, or China manipulating currency, etc. I am focused on what we can control. What our nation needs is a retraining effort. The money we are spending on unemployment and other services would be better spent invested in people so that they can acquire new skill sets that are relevant in an ever changing world.
The question is who will lead, and who will pick up the bill? To prepare our workers for the future will require collaboration across business and government. Tax and other incentives need to be in place to encourage the retooling of America. So as GE Chairman Jeffery Immelt and the rest of the White House Council of Economic Affairs weighs in on jobs, I hope they emphasize that we need to create opportunities for workers, and provide them will the skill sets required to compete.
Otherwise, the marches may extend to Washington D.C. and a state capital near you.
[i] The Price of Everything Eduardo Porter
[ii] Obama wants business world’s best ideas on jobs USA Today
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Posted by Marc Emmer - President - Optimize Inc.