Aug
10

I read an article “Four Lifestyle Rules To Keep You Healthy” on Time. com and thought to myself what would the four rules be to keep brands healthy.

Tough to narrow to four, but here are mine.

1. An important and differentiating idea – the starting point for all great brands.
2. Relevance to audiences – based on understanding their hopes, desires and real life practices.
2. Tapping emotion – because the majority of our decisions are made with our “guts”.
3. Brilliant execution – which is so uncommonly excellent across the board that it reflects a clear leadership position.

Would you substitute any others? Please share your thoughts.

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Jul
08

Great article by Zephrin Lasker in MediaPost. His shout out to those in the advertising and marketing world is that in crowded markets, where hundreds of companies are fighting over a shrinking profit pool, we have to develop entirely new ways of marketing. Blue Ocean Strategy philosophy and tools (with the desired outcome of creating uncontested market space and new value for customers), is a great framework for making this happen.

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Jul
05

The goal of any organization is to create sustainable competitive differentiation, by providing to customers what they value and want in ways that others can’t. One way to beat the competition, according to Kim and Mauborgne in their book Blue Ocean Strategy, is to stop trying to beat the competition. Instead, create uncontested market space to create and capture new demand. Thereby making the competition irrelevant.

The classic example of creating a blue ocean (referenced in their book) is Cirque du Soleil. From a group of 20 street performers in 1984, Cirque is now a major artistic entertainment company delighting almost 90 million spectators a year. The company looked at traditional circus acts like Ringling Brothers and transformed them into “Broadway meets artistic music and dance” experiences. While increasing customer value and ticket prices, they simultaneously eliminated the largest cost items of the circus, including the star performers and animal shows.

The driving forces for creating blue oceans should be apparent. Across categories, we’re presented with more supply than we could possibly demand. Global competition. More information at our fingertips. Too many brands that look, sound and function in similar ways.

This is the situation in healthcare. Many systems and hospitals are indistinguishable. And organizational-wide initiatives that focus on the safety, service and care of patients (functional benefits) do little to distinguish one hospital from another, as these are table stake improvements that all organizations focus on. Healthcare marketing practices don’t help distinguish either – as communications and outreach also tend to look and sound a lot alike.

But this doesn’t have to be the case. Every healthcare organization can create its own blue ocean. Because here’s the thing. It’s not carved in stone that blue ocean must equate to creating uncontested market space. Creating a stronger competitive position can be, and in many instances is, a more realistic agenda. Particularly in a down economy where companies need to do more with less. The size of the ocean doesn’t matter as much as the re-energizing and differentiating value it provides to customers.

The Blue Ocean book offers powerful tools for building a blue ocean strategy. One of them is the Four Action Framework, which guides companies in evaluating what factors they can possibly eliminate, reduce, raise and create:

Picture 1

In the case of healthcare systems and hospitals, consider these factors in the context of how the players in your market tend to compete and how customers choose their providers. Think broadly about all of the elements that make up your value proposition (e.g. product, service and delivery). Look across:
• strategic segments that exist within your market
• different customer groups, e.g. influencers, users, purchasers (including employees)
• the scope, and delivery, of your product and service offerings (across the buyer experience)
• the rational-emotional appeals to buyers
• the trends that affect customers and business over time, etc.
• alternative industries (great stimulus for seeing and thinking differently)

Looking at these factors with a fresh and unbiased perspective, cross-functionally across the entire organization can unlock innovation that creates stronger market space for your healthcare system or hospital and new value for communities, patients, families, providers and partners. In healthcare, these innovations tend to come down to either clinical care (product) or providing care (service). Most likely, given that product is easily replicated over time (e.g. new machines, treatments), these innovations will likely reflect better ways to serve, and enhance the experience of being, a patient.

The starting point, however, must be your brand promise. You need this focus in order to create innovations true to who you are and how you’re perceived, and that employees and providers are aligned around and equipped to deliver.

Here are a few examples of healthcare organizations that have created their blue oceans. The key point to remember is that the size of the ocean doesn’t matter as much as the re-energizing and differentiating value you provide to customers.

Mayo Clinic Health Manager; a free tool that creates the ability for people to easily manage their families health online.
HelloHealth; a new company mixing office and online visits to give people personal attention from their neighborhood doctor when and how they want it.
• Parrish Medical Center in Titusville, FL., who chose to compete to improve their culture and the engagement of its employees (who worked together to eliminate over $7 million in hospital costs).
• Highmark, a Pennsylvania insurer who rolled out the nation’s first prepaid gift card designed specifically for healthcare expenses.
InstyMeds™, the health care industry’s first fully automated ATM-style dispenser of prescription medications.

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Jun
20

Message to all health and healthy lifestyle brand marketers…

Now is the time to rethink long-held strategic assumptions inside your company, to challenge decades of conventional wisdom in your industry, and to push yourself to learn, grow, and innovate. This is the advice of Bill Taylor, co-founder of Fast Company in his article The 10 Questions Every Change Agent Must Answer.

He believes that it’s time to think – and do – something different given the backdrop of an economy where there are too many competitors chasing too few consumers with products and services that tend to be too much alike. That if you can summon the nerve, these hard times can be a great time to separate yourself from competitors.

He suggests these ten questions that leaders should ask of themselves and their organizations. And he adds that the leaders with the best answers win. I’ve added my own commentary in the form of organizations that I think have really good answers.

1. Do you see opportunities the competition doesn’t see? By placing the customer in the center of their universe (as opposed to competing with other providers), Hello Health is redefining the game within healthcare.

2. Do you have new ideas about where to look for new ideas? Afterheels in the UK challenged the shoe industry’s prevailing assumptions and found their inspiration on the dance floor.

3. Are you the most of anything? Walmart is (and owns the position of) the most affordable, while McDonalds is the most accessible.

4. If your company went out of business tomorrow, who would miss you and why? Know this is an easy (and too often used) example, but Apple.

5. Have you figured out how your organization’s history can help to shape its future? Puma’s figured it out, reinterpreting its past to stake its place in the future.

6. Can your customers live without you? For most of us, a world without Google would be unimaginable. And though we don’t want to admit it, we’d probably say the same about our Blackberry’s.

7. Do you treat different customers differently? Amazon and Zappos could be two of the most customer-centric companies in the world.

8. Are you getting the best contributions from the most people? SAS is. It’s been on Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For 12 consecutive years; as it’s one of the best for healthcare, childcare and work-life balance.

9. Are you consistent in your commitment to change? To quote from Zara’s website – Zara interprets, adapts trends in record times and offers new items twice weekly.

10. Are you learning as fast as the world is changing? Mayo Clinic is the pace-setter within the healthcare space when it comes to employing social media practices to engage and connect its various audiences.

I welcome others to contribute the organizations they think had/have the best answers.

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May
05

Just because you’ve jumped on the Social Media bandwagon doesn’t mean that you’re a player.  Tweets don’t equal relevancy. Joining social networks won’t automatically grow your fan base. Uploads don’t automatically equate to popularity. While these tactics are important tools in the new 21st century healthcare marketing arsenal, they don’t guarantee your place at the customers table. 

At the end of the day, there’s only one way to ensure your relevancy and to secure your future. Find your different. It can be a big different or a little different. But either way, it should yield big impact for your customers. Your different should improve lives – making people happier, helping them achieve what they can’t on their own, fulfilling dreams, easing fears, surprising and delighting.  Along the way, building brand love. 

Borrowing on Blue Ocean Strategy® principles, here are four steps that a company can take to carve out new market space and get their different:

• Eliminate: what features can you eliminate that industry players take for granted but that add no real perceived  value (or distinctiveness) for customers (e.g. Cirque du Soleil eliminating star performers)
• Reduce: what features can you reduce below those of other competitors to make you more compelling for customers  (Hello Health eliminating the complexity of making a doctor’s appointment) 
• Raise: what attributes can you raise to add value beyond competitors (NikeiD making it possible to customize your own shoes)
• Create: what new sources of value can you create that others have never offered (HealthVault helping you manage your family’s health)

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Apr
25

There are many different brand models.

But there are common characteristics that distinguish ALL great (different) health and healthy lifestyle brands from others. They see their world, and that of their customers, differently. Which lets them think and do different things – to challenge conventions, hypothesize alternatives and explore new possibilities.

Based on principles of Blue Ocean Strategy, a proven framework for guiding companies to create new and uncontested market space, these include:

looking across alternative industries, knowing that their products and services compete with companies outside their traditional market
looking across strategic groups within industries, based on customers’ decision-making practices
looking across different buyer (customer) groups, knowing there are those directly and indirectly involved in purchase decisions
looking across complementary products and services, to break free from accepted boundaries of competitive offerings
looking across the spectrum of functional or emotional appeals to buyers, to create new bases of appeal
look across time, to shape (rather than adapt to) external trends over time

Are you one of these great brands?

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Feb
16


Wanted to share this presentation of 40 renewable energy sources for brands, grouped within these dimensions. Common denominator across all the examples is that these brands clearly understand their place in people’s lives. 

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Jan
26

Like all other industries, healthcare and healthy lifestyle brands are feeling the effects of the recession.

There’s no magic bullet that will help you come out stronger on the other side of the downturn. But there are ways to seize what is admittedly an awful situation and steer it to your advantage. By discovering new insights. Uncovering and providing what your customers are hungry for.

Address these five questions to help you position yourself as the one to turn to when things come around. Questions that revolve around three “R”s – reshaping, refining and rationalizing. And which are ultimately about customers. Because without them, nothing us really matters.

1. Is your message simple and sharp? Are you providing a crystal clear understanding of the value of your offering?

2. Does your portfolio reflect this clarity and simplicity? Is it focused on those offerings that drive reputation, relationships and business? Is it simple for customers to easily shop and choose what they want?

3. Are you adding value in ways that are important to customers while building on your differentiation and strengths, e.g. through new product or service enhancements, channels, partners, content, experiences?

4. Are you investing in what matters most to customers? If not, go dark. Because nothing else really matters. Stop marketing to them, and do for them. Engage then where they are and how they want. Align all your activities and spending to deliver that value. And if you can’t find the value in an activity, let it go.

5. Are you operating with integrity and treating employees, customers, shareholders and partners with respect? Too many have already let us down. And they’ve been called out. Rise above, and you’ll come out stronger on the other side.

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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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Feb
20

Do you ever take time during the day to ask yourself this simple question: is our brand strong enough to be the one that customers will want to do business with next year? Or 2-3 years down the road? 

Why do customers seek out your brand? What do they expect to see from you; to gain from you? And where do they think/do you think you really shine? There are many other questions like these, and they’re important to answer. Because as easy or hard as it is for you to answer them, so too is it for your customers. 
Here are a few ideas for you to ponder as your brand grows and matures. 
explore your strengths: what do you do best, what do you have the ability to do that you’re currently not doing, what should you be doing to build your strengths for the future
express your strengths: are they “brandable” as unique processes or services; which others can be used to build your image with current and prospective customers
extend your strengths: how can you leverage your strengths in specific areas where you have little or no experience – through new products and services, with new partners, through new channels.
So, are you strong enough?

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