The changing nature of health brands and customer relationships

The Brands Create Customers blog (on next-generation brands: new models, platforms, applications) is authored by Brian Phipps. I find great value in Brian’s take on the changing nature of brands and the brand-customer relationship.
Brian wrote a post last week titled New Brand Glossary: update 4. It’s worth holding on to this glossary. Because it doesn’t resemble much of the current (old) thinking about brands and their holds on customers.
Here’s a snippet of his introduction:
Traditional brand glossaries usually assume a passive customer “audience” for brand messaging campaigns, where the brand aspires to be a “belief system” that serves the company’s interests. In this view, brands aim to be timeless (static) “icons” worshiped by “consumers,” who are positioned as little more than sheep with credit. Traditional brand glossaries are therefore largely glossaries of control. The brands they describe really don’t do much for customers—except to keep them in place.
In contrast, this is a glossary of value-based brands and of brand innovation. It contains concepts, terms and definitions for a new era of brands designed to foment new business by creating new customer opportunities. The essence of these brands is collaboration, not control. These brands create proactive new customers who leave old brands—and old companies—far behind.
How do you find most health brands stack up against these new definitions? How about most health brand marketing?


I'm President of Trajectory. We re-energize businesses across the health continuum by helping our clients to imagine and create new value. Before Trajectory, I was EVP Management Board member at Interbrand, the world's most influential brand consultancy. I've also held senior level marketing positions at Faberge, L'Oreal and Beiersdorf.




July 26th, 2010 at 2:00 pm
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Changing nature of health brands & customer relationships | Healthy Conversations [link to post] good brand thinking from B. Phipps
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August 13th, 2010 at 12:38 pm
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The changing nature of health brands and customer relationships [link to post]
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