coke

Mystery Guitar Man Video! Rhythm!

Team Altman Awesome Mystery Guitar Man Video!

We have to warn you that after viewing “Rhythm” you just might get a little hungry for a certain fast food meal, at a certain fast food restaurant. We won’t mention any names, but you’ll understand after you view “Rhythm.” We have to go eat now!

As always enjoy, and share Rhythm!


 

 

 

Understanding the Position of a Follower

In the not too distant past, advertising was prepared in isolation, or in other words you studied the product and its features, and then you prepared advertising, which communicated to your customers the benefits of those features, and in comparing that to the ‘Positioning Era’ the rules are actually reversed, so to establish a position, you must often not only name competitive names, but also ignore most of the old advertising rules as well, since in category after category, the prospect already knows the benefits of using the product and to climb on someone’s product ladder, you must relate your brand to the brands already in the prospect’s mind.

Let’s take a look at a classic positioning strategy that can be used to worm your way onto a ladder owned by someone else as 7-Up did, by linking the product to what was already in the mind of the prospect, the “uncola” position brilliantly established 7-Up as an alternative to a cola drink, and so you won’t think that was just a one-time fluke, and to prove the universality of positioning concepts, let’s check out McCormick Communications that took easy listening radio station WLKW, an also-ran in the Providence, Rhode Island market, and made it number one, and their theme was WLKW, the “unrock” station, so to find a unique position, you won’t find an “uncola” idea inside a 7-Up can, you find it, and this is key, ‘inside the cola drinkers head.’

Understand that consumers rank brands in their minds and if a brand is not number one, then to be successful you somehow must relate it to the number one brand, and a campaign that pretends that the market leader does not exist is likely to fail, a great example of this is Avis, that tried unsuccessfully for years to win customers, pretending that the number Hertz did not exist, finally, it began using the line, “Avis is only No.2 in rent-a-cars, so why go with us? We try harder.” In examining the success achieved, we find that for 13 years in a row Avis lost money, and after the campaign, Avis quickly became profitable, so whether Avis actually tried harder is not relevant to their success, but rather, consumers finally were able to relate Avis to Hertz, which was number one in their minds, so once again it is critical to understand that consumers continually rank brands in their minds.

Shortly after being sold to ITT, Avis decided it was no longer satisfied with being Number 2, so it ran ads saying, “Avis is going to be Number 1.” Avis was not destined to be number one unless it could find a weakness in Hertz to exploit and everyone knew it, and furthermore, the old campaign not only related Number 2 Avis to Number 1 Hertz on the product ladder in the prospects mind but also capitalized on the natural sympathy people have for the underdog, and shortly after releasing their new campaign, Avis’ market share began to fall, after losing the value gained from consumer’s sympathy for Avis’ position as the underdog, and forgetting or ignoring the fact that it is the consumer that ranks brands in their mind.

In today’s marketplace, the competitor’s position is just as important as your own, and sometimes more important, because if a company isn’t first, then it has to be the first to occupy the number 2 position, and although it’s not an easy task, it can be done. MCI is against AT&T, Burger King is against McDonalds, Pepsi is against Coke, and Firestone is against Goodyear, and so on.

If you are shooting for second place, your strategy is most often determined by the market leader and in strength there is weakness, for where ever the leader is strong, there is opportunity for a would-be No. 2 to turn the tables, as you discover the essence of the leader and then present the consumer prospects with the opposite, in other words, don’t try to be better or different, as it’s often the upstart versus old reliable.

Scope, the good tasting mouthwash, hung the “medicine breath” label on its Listerine competition, but understand that you simply can’t knock the competition, as the ‘law of the opposite’ is a two edge sword, and it requires honing in on a weakness that your prospect will quickly acknowledge: One whiff of Listerine and you know that your mouth would smell like a hospital, and then you quickly twist the sword: Scope is the good tasting mouthwash that kills germs.

Burger King’s most successful years came when it was on the attack and it opened with “Have it your way,” which twitted McDonalds mass manufacturing approach to hamburgers, then it hit McDonalds with “Broiling, not frying” and “The Whopper beats the Big Mac.” All these programs reinforced the No. 2 alternative position. Then, believe it or not, for some unknown reason, Burger King ignored the law of the opposite, “The best food for fast times,” We do it the way you do it,” “You got to break the rules,” and so on. It even started a program to attract little kids, the mainstay of McDonalds’ strength, and this is no way to stay a strong No. 2, as Burger King’s sales per unit declined and have never returned, since Burger King made the mistake of not taking the opposite tack.

There are more successful followers than there are successful leaders (the first with the most), so the chances are great you will find your greatest success positioning your business as a follower, but you must develop a complete understanding of positioning and the mind of the consumer, and the fact that it’s the mind of the consumer that will always decide where you will rank, and ultimately the levels of success you achieve.

Understanding the Positioning of a Leader

Many companies such as Avis and Seven-Up found viable positions to marketing leaders, but most companies don’t want to be an also-ran, successful or not, and they want to be a leader like Hertz or Coke, so how do you get to be a leader, actually, it’s quite simple to do, for example, remember Charles Lindbergh and Neil Armstrong? You just get there ‘first with the most’ and history shows that the first brand into the brain, on average, gets twice the long-term market share of the No. 2 brand and twice again as much as the No. 3 brand.

If you are still not convinced, to further prove the importance of being first, consider the fact that when a marketing leader isn’t first in a new category, the new product is usually an also-ran in the minds of the target consumer market, for example, take Coca-Cola, a gigantic company compared with Dr. Pepper, and yet when Coke introduced a competing product, Mr. Pibb, even the immense resources of the cola giant that is Coca-Cola, couldn’t put much of a dent in Dr. Pepper’s sales, and Kodak was supposedly going to cream Polaroid when they got into the instant camera business, but their results were disappointing to say the least, as Kodak managed to take only a small share, at the great expense of a substantial loss in its conventional camera business.

You must understand that as long as a company owns the position, there is no point in running advertisements that repeat the obvious, as in “We’re No.1” for instance, as it is  much better to enhance the product category in the consumer prospect’s mind, for example, IBM’s advertising usually ignores competition and sells the value of computers in general. So then another good question becomes why isn’t it a good idea to rent advertising that says, “We’re No. 1”? The reason is psychological, as either the prospect knows you are No. 1 and wonders why you are so insecure that you have to say so, or the prospect doesn’t know you are No. 1, if not, why not, and you don’t want to create an opening for any doubt to creep into the minds of your target consumer market.

“The real thing”, this classic Coca-Cola advertising campaign is a strategy that can work for any leader, as the essential ingredient is again ‘getting into the mind first,’ and then keeping that position by reinforcing the original concept, in other words, Coke is the standard by which all others are judged, and in contrast, everything else is an imitation of the “real thing.” Now this is not the same thing as saying, “We’re No. 1,” but the “real thing,” like a first love, will always occupy a special place in the consumer prospect’s mind.

You must also be aware that you cannot define your leadership position in your own terms, it must instead be defined in the prospect’s terms, and saying we are, “The best-selling high-definition television under $1,000 in North America,” just won’t work, as you have to build a leadership position using the prospect’s terms, which is what’s already in their mind.

One classic marketing mistake made by market leaders is to assume that the power of the product is derived from the power of the organization, but it’s just the reverse, as the power of the organization is derived from the power of the product, the position that the leader’s product owns in the consumer prospect’s mind. Coke has power, but outside the cola field, the Coca-Cola Company has to earn its power the hard way, either by getting into the mind first, by establishing a strong alternative position, or by repositioning the leader, as we see with Coca-Cola’s Mr. Pibb, that ran a poor second place race to Dr. Pepper, and all the power of the Coca-Cola Company couldn’t do much about it.

Just like Coke, Xerox has much power, as Xerox means copier, and Xerox owns the copier position because it got into the mind the first thing, and exploited that copier position by a massive marketing program, but in computers, word processors and other office products, Xerox starts at ground zero, and usually without much success.

So you have to first ask yourself, “What position do I own now?”, and realize external strategy is really thinking in reverse, so instead of starting with yourself, you start with the mind of the consumer prospect, and instead of asking what you are, you ask what ‘position you already own in the mind’ of the prospect, and changing minds in our over-communicated society is an extremely difficult task, as it’s much easier to work with what’s already there. Next, ask yourself, “What position do I want to own?”, and then ask, “How can I be the first to claim a unique position in the mind of my customer?”, as here is where you try to figure out the best position to “own” from a long-term perspective.

Finally, it is critical to remember, “Own” is the key word, and too many failed programs set out to communicate a position that is impossible to preempt right from the very start because someone else already “owns” it.

Awesome Happiness Video! Coca-Cola Happiness Machine!

Team Altman Awesome Happiness Video!

This video is really fun to watch as a Coca-Cola vending machine is transformed into a happiness machine delivering “doses” of happiness, and the spontaneously genuine responses from the people make it well worth watching, and wondering where the happiness will strike next.

As always enjoy, share and Where will the Happiness Strike Next?


Two Amazing Videos! Experiments with Post-It Notes!

post it notes 072808atlapostitwallTeam Altman Look at Two Awesome Post-It Notes Videos:

As always enjoy, share and what have you created with post-it notes?

Video 1: Deadline Post-It Stop Motion


“This is my senior project at Savannah College of Art and Design. Where my idea comes from is that every time when I am busy, I feel that I am not fighting with my works, I am fighting with those post-it notes and deadline. I manipulating the post-it notes to do pixel-like stop motion and there are some interactions between real actor and post-its.”– Bang-yao Liu

Video 2: Extreme Sticky Note Experiments


Winner of a 2009 Webby Award and People’s Voice Webby Award!

“Fritz & Stephen, the madmen behind the Extreme Diet Coke & Mentos Experiments, now cause chaos in the office with over a quarter of a million sticky notes! From waterfalls to wheels, all this craziness is made out of nothing but sticky notes — the zigzag pads made from pop-up dispensers.

From a simple cascading pad to 40,000 sticky notes falling from the ceiling, this video uses 280,951 sticky notes in less than 3 minutes. And don’t worry: they can be reused! And when they’re beyond repair, we make sure to recycle them (or use them the normal way!).”

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