Sep
24

Today’s the day. Finally. As of Wednesday, no campaign ads, emails, mobile texts.

So what are some lessons healthcare and healthy lifestyle brands can take away from the battle of the last two political brands standing?

Ride the wave. Obama was handed on a silver platter an obvious case for change. At the same time, many deemed the competitive Republican brand to be lagging behind the times. Obama’s team did a tremendous job of staying on point and seizing the moment.

Own a word (as Al Reis pointed out years ago, it’s a powerful strategy). Obama scripted “Change” into his vocabulary from day one. It was his brand theme. And it was ubiquitous. McCain began as the “Experience” candidate. He then co-opted “Change” and tried to make it his own. Before he became the “Maverick.” Witness the results.

Keep it simple. Like “America is ready for Change.” Doesn’t get much better than this.

It’s rarely about “functional” features and benefits. Evidence the talk about wardrobe spend, multiple (but too numerous to remember) homes, the demeanor of a presidential-looking candidate, and the demeanor of someone who is not. It’s rarely about rational arguments, but rather how we make people feel while they’re in our presence.

Execute Brilliantly. One candidate never waivered. Was consistent in his style and tone. Brilliant in his execution from start to finish. The other was not.

Relevance alone doesn’t win the day. But “different” and relevant will. Both candidates were relevant. But one was also different. Only one provoked a response of “that’s what I’m hungry for.”

Build A Community of Evangelists. Witness the thousands of people attending Obama rally’s. The thousands of first-time volunteers. The tremendous use of social media to generate conversations, collaboration and community. Beyond their war chest of funds, Obama’s team was so much more in tune with their consumers motivations, expectations and practices.

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Sep
15

In a world filled with too much of everything (and just as much similarity), the ongoing process of building clear, valued and sustained differentiation through branding is a crucial step to forging relationships and growing business.

So how can your health brand stand out and apart? By aligning your organization, services or products around the promise of your brand. Ensuring that all you do from selling your brand’s story inside, to building your product, service, market, channel, pricing, customer service and communications strategies reinforce why you’re the best choice for consumers. And this is about REAL. SIMPLE. BRANDING:

REAL.
I remember calling AOL a few years ago. I was told via IVR that “we’ve doubled our number of customer service representatives to deliver a higher standard of customer service. Please hold and the next representative will be with you shortly. Your waiting time is approximately nine minutes.” That’s not real.

SIMPLE.
Stand for something. One thing. Be the best at safety, performance, whitening, speed, durability, magic, luxury. Put a stake in the ground and declare your one thing to the world. Remember Billy Crystal’s line in City Slickers. He tells his riding mates that life’s about one thing. Well, the same holds true for branding.

BRANDING.
Like any verb, connotes action. Practicing the REAL and SIMPLE of above. Managing the multiple (off line and on line) interactions that people have with your brand each day; and that either enhance or detract from your desired perceptions. Remember that whether you’re driving or not, your indelible mark is being stamped into consumers minds! It’s an imprint that’s hard to erase, so create it on your terms.

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Sep
01

Microsoft just broke their new three hundred million ad campaign — designed (I presume at some point) to sell more PC’s by creating a more favorable impression of Microsoft’s Windows operating system. Well, I don’t get it. The spots are humorous. It’s fun to see Jerry and Bill side by side. But they’re actually kind of boring (reinforcing the image Microsoft is trying to dispel). And don’t get how it’s going to move the sales needle when Microsoft equals Vista – the enemy of all who work on the PC.

Imagine what  good health+ healthy lifestyle brand marketers could do with $300MM. 

Imagine you did. What BHAG’s (big hairy audacious goals) would you set out to achieve. Now open your eyes, but don’t let reality set in. How could you achieve these same goals with available resources. How can you be more insightful about your audiences (and your audience segmentation), more creative about what you provide that others don’t, and more imaginative about your tactics? Just a thought.

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Aug
15

While brand-building fundamentals tend to be similar across many industries, Health Care Systems, with their many hospitals, facilities and audiences, possess a unique set of challenges and requirements. Based on our extensive work within this industry, here are some “Rules of the Road” starting points:

Leadership must take the lead
Brand-building commitment and demonstration must start from the top. It is imperative that leadership embrace branding as a strategic tool to proactively build and nurture relationships.

Start with your strategic plan direction
Any “system level” brand work needs to be grounded in reality. And this grounding starts with strategic plan direction. Business initiatives such as expanding into new geography, introducing new service lines, merging with other entities and physician groups will impact your brands value proposition.

Consider the importance of your multiple external and internal audiences
Externally, there are your local communities, patients and their families, media and politicians. Internally, there are doctors, nurses, staffs and volunteers, boards and foundations – who will make or break you brand-building effort. Ultimately, they all need to understand, connect with and be aligned around what your system brand stands for and how it relates.

Analyze where system-audience relationships exist, today and into the future
Have you historically focused on building relationships with the system brand or the individual hospitals and facilities that provide care? Consider these answers in the context of your strategic plan and annual business goals, e.g. creating a seamlessly integrated ” continuum of care” or an affiliation of specialists. Analyze the pros and cons of each possible branding system scenario.

Formalize your brand agenda
All system staffers, physicians and associates should have a clear and consistent understanding of what makes your brand unique and special. Commit your intended brand purpose, promises, personality, positioning and unifying brand idea to paper for all to help shape and embrace – and then use this as a guidepost for all brand actions and communications.

Audit, monitor and refine the myriad ways you express your brand
Consider all the ways your brand speaks to its audiences. All impart messages about your brand. To ensure that your brand consistently shines through, you need to audit all of these different touch points to gauge their effectiveness at conveying an ” on-brand” message.

Brand from the inside-out
Branding is all about building relationships to fuel business growth. And these relationships start inside your system. You must be aligned to deliver your brand promise day in and day out through the actions and interactions of your staffers and physicians. Every single touch point through which your local communities and patients experience your health care system brand should reinforce its vision.

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Jul
30

Who’d have thought that Burger King could see into the future of health brand marketing. Remember their “have it your way” campaign? Were they really ahead of the curve in customizing brands to meet our individual needs.
From custom protein shakes, to skin care products, beverages and even senior-focused retailers such as HOJO in Lyon, France – providing “just-for-me” experiences is the most effective way possible to ensure brand relevance and connection.
One important impact of this, however, is how companies individualize the associated customer service experience to align with brand delivery.

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Jul
02

Differentiation is the ability of your healthcare or healthy lifestyle brand to stand apart from others in your market, in ways that are important to your audiences and supported by your organizational strengths. It reflects not only how you’re going to play the game, but how you’re going to play it differently by creating meaningful, genuine and lasting points of difference. 

But most brands are failing. A 2006 study by Copernicus Greenfield showed that brands in 48 out of 51 product/service categories were perceived to be undifferentiated by consumers. And 80%+ of products still continue to fail, according to Ernst & Young, because of lack of differentiation.

Yet the benefits of differentiation as shown below (in terms of profit margins, operating earnings, market cap growth) are tremendous, as demonstrated by Y&R’s Brand Asset Valuator.

So why are most brands failing. Because differentiation actually requires you to think different and do different, starting with your strategy. Which requires original thinking – which is sorely lacking today. But there are some brands that are truly differentiated, and that transcend their categories.

These brands:

• are aligned – with the culture of the organization behind them (e.g. Nike, Southwest Airlines)
• are relevant and deliver on their promises – what people want and performing the way they want them to (e.g. Ikea, Nordstrom)
• are surprising – raising the bar relative to expectations (e.g. Virgin, Jones Soda, Cirque De Soleil)
• tap emotions – as product benefits have become table stakes (e.g. Harley-Davidson, Tiffany)
• execute brilliantly – through their actions and interactions (e.g. Ralph Lauren, Zappos)

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Jun
17

Was at dinner with a client the other night, and we ventured into a conversation about our agency’s ultimate value. We were considering that it might be our ability to craft and tell their brand stories – in authentic, simple and remarkable ways.

A well-crafted story

• raises awareness
• changes perceptions
• reinforces existing relationships
• creates new ones
• generates sales

…and (should) inspire and connect all employees whose consistent delivery of the story is critical to ultimate business success.

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Jun
03

There was a recent article in Ad Age about an agency committed to Marketing That Matters. Their point-of-view is that the new marketing demands more than telling and selling to consumers tired of being bombarded with one-way messages. Based on the changing priorities of the consumer, driven in part by events taking place around the globe – they believe that cause needs to be baked-in to all marketing programs.

I’d suggest that “marketing that matters” first begins with a more expansive view of your brand and an appreciation of your potential to engage, inspire and guide your audiences. To unleash the full potential of your brand, you must have a wider view of your prospective place in your consumers world.

Beyond products and services, brands should impart knowledge and insight. That knowledge is out there anyway in the vastness of the web, but why not take the leadership role among your peers to organize and be the “beacon” that consumers turn to for their guidance. Consider what Dove has accomplished:

• As an adjunct to its selling efforts, the brand has become an authoritative expert on beauty – facilitated by a site that has become a destination for product and category information.

• It has become a brand that fulfills relationships; creating communities of “like” consumers who aspire to connect with others like them. Through Their Campaign For Real Beauty, it’s united millions of women from around the globe.

Never has there been more opportunity for brands to step up, reach out and engage on all three levels. Particularly for health + healthy lifestyle brands whose very existence is inherently more important to consumers.

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May
14

Found a very old issue of Brand Marketing, and thought it would be fun to report on their “top ten brands to watch in 2001.”

1. Amazon
2. America Online
3. AT&T
4. Hillary Clinton
5. Firestone
6. Napster
7. Nokia
8. Onstar
9. Revlon
10. xfl (upstart that challenged the NFL, with a bunch of players who almost made the NFL)

As the magazine reported, the list includes some that are in the ascendant, others that are definitely teetering and still others that will simply demand attention no matter which way they break.

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Apr
27

No doubt about it, we have two strong brands squaring off here. Both have strong points-of-view, personalities, agendas [at least we hope] and own strong associations. Both have strong voices. And they both have tremendous stamina.

But which one of these brands is more relevant given the state of the country and the world today – culturally, socially, politically, economically. Which one has the ability to serve as beacon to inspire and guide. Which one do you want to be part of your life for the next four years [at least].

More than any time in our recent history, probably due to the non-stop exposure and transparency that our media channels provide – there’s just so much conversation everywhere about these two candidates. About these two brands. And oh yea, about McCain.

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