BANG Branding Changed
Figuring out why branding changed is moot. Understanding HOW branding has changed is important. Brands used to create aspirations for customers as this 1958 Tide commercial demonstrates:
Flash forward to this video from Red Bull TV:
What happened?
A: The web, Smart Phones, We Changed, Branding Changed.
There isn’t ONE thing moving brand marketing from Tide as creator of customer aspirations to Red Bull’s understanding of their need to surf their customer aspirations. The differences aren’t subtle and they include:
- Moving from “brand-centric” (Tide) to “customer-centric” (Red Bull) stories.
- Red Bull’s editing and visual pacing is 1ox faster than Tide’s.
- Tide’s once subtle references to “good mothers” use Tide is obvious, garish and off-putting now.
- The nature of brand storytelling is different (due to the first bullet).
Branding’s focus then and now:
In 1958 brands like Tide created aspirations and expectations for their customers. Tide asks questions with a single affirmative response. Questions such as:
- Do you want to be a good mother? Yes.
- Do you want OTHERS to see you as a good mother? Yes.
- Do you want to have clean clothes? Yes.
- Do you want to protect the environment? Yes.
Tide’s linkage (good mother = uses tide) is absurd NOW. After millions of advertising messages, Moore’s Law, the creation of the web, mobile phones and thousands of TV stations, programs and media increasingly controlled by DIY apps Tide’s 1958 brand storytelling feels obvious and garish.
P&G, Tide’s manufacturer, has been the largest advertiser for years. P&G won the “honor” again last year. It makes sense to be the world’s largest advertiser when customers believe your stories. When brands create expectations advertising works.
Not so much anymore.
Red Bull’s Media Strategy
Money P&G spent on print, TV and coupons Red Bull spends creating ground breaking publications, apps and games. Red Bull’s strategy has distinct phases:
- Publish amazing stories across media (video, apps, print magazines, video games, online magazines).
- COPE (Create Once Publish Everywhere).
- Brand the heroes featured.
- Share branded heroes “inside baseball” stories about adventures.
- Rinse and Repeat across media types (print, online, video) and platforms (website, apps, social nets).
- Curate “Hero-Like” User Generated Content (UGC).
Red Bull buys advertising too. Their budget must be 80% publishing to 20% (or less) advertising in support of their publishing. Publishing is Red Bull’s marketing and advertising. Red Bull is a media company following and feeding the aspirations of customers not the other way around.
Red Bull Bulletin Contents page:
Follow Customer Aspirations
Red Bull doesn’t limit their content. They don’t edit based on what THEY think customers want. Red Bull casts a large net across adventure sports, car racing, video games and music. Their multi-channel strategy is sure to create content their 18 – 30 year old male audience wants, will talk about and share.
Red Bull LEADS as well as following. Their Stratos jump from space is an example of Red Bull’s extending what they know about their customers to create a breathtaking “jump from space”. Stratos is Red Bull’s “advertising” and it was so arresting and awesome for every dollar they spent they must have receivd $10 in free media, shares and brand awareness.
Stratos, Red Bull’s “space jump” (pictured below) is a great example of Red Bull’s marketing lesson. We must create content so awesome the world stops a little to think about what we are doing. If that sounds like a tall order it is because “stopping the world” is impossible.
Impossible UNLESS you extend your marketing and your customer’s aspirations beyond your comfort zone. Out there somewhere long past “comfort zone” is your brand or company’s Stratos Jump. When you find your Stratos a single word explains our content marketing / content curation advice – JUMP!
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