So here is the secret of the below 10 Marketers of the Year ... know yourself. That's it.
Asking your customers what they think about you is scary but necessary. Our clients use a three step "Positive Positioning Process" ...
Get help says Marc Pritchard, global marketing and brand building officer, Procter and Gamble, "Innovation, especially as fast as the world changes, can't always come from within. You have to build and sustain a great internal team and the team has to know the power and skill in building the partnerships that keep us at the forefront of what's next."
Step 1: Clarify who your company really is in the minds of your customers.Sometimes it helps to outsource to trusted assessors and advisors who will give it to you straight. Prepare to listen and react with the help of efficient Social Media services like Readian6 and Awareness Networks.
Step 2: Focus all your communications on simple confirmation of your best stuff.
Step 3: Earn your place as a better company by openly fixing your less positive issues.
Get help says Marc Pritchard, global marketing and brand building officer, Procter and Gamble, "Innovation, especially as fast as the world changes, can't always come from within. You have to build and sustain a great internal team and the team has to know the power and skill in building the partnerships that keep us at the forefront of what's next."
Admitting that your company needs to re-evaluate your position with your customers (and employees) seems to be the first step towards great marketing and sales results. Everything is changing and you must change with it. Authenticity and transparency are easy to say but really hard to admit, evolve and implement... I recently summarized a report on Adaptability here.
As you learn what you are, you can create campaigns to accentuate the positive. Finding out what you are not will challenge you to fix it. Read on below and consider the guts that Russ Wiener at Domino's needed to admit that they had to change their recipe!
Here is Brandweek's CMO Special Issue and the 2010 winners... you can apply these lessons earned to any size company in any industry.
Grand Marketer of the Year 2010: James Moorhead, Old Spice
By Jim Edwards on Mon Sep 13 2010Read full article »
Steve Jobs, Apple
By Todd Wasserman on Mon Sep 13 2010Apple CEO Steve Jobs is having none of this. As everyone knows, Apple's success is based at least in part on opacity. The brand has no Facebook or Twitter page, doesn't respond to media requests (including one from this publication) and sometimes uses heavy-handed tactics to censor information. Apple's mania for secrecy reached its apogee with the iPad.
Read full article »
Geoff Cottrill, Converse
By Rebecca Cullers on Mon Sep 13 2010One passage in particular has resonated: "Our company was organized in 1908 fully believing that there was an earnest demand from the retail shoe dealer for a rubber shoe company that would be independent enough not to follow every other company in everything they do."
Read full article »
Justin Lambeth and Gannon Jones, Frito-Lay
By Elaine Wong on Mon Sep 13 2010Instead of spuds, consumers thought of the factory. They deemed the product "heavily processed, full of preservatives and one-third of Americans didn't realize it was made with potatoes," recalls Frito-Lay marketing vp Gannon Jones. "When we heard that point, we were like, 'Wow! I can't believe that!'"
Read full article »
David Webster, Microsoft
By Janet Stilson on Mon Sep 13 2010Well in advance of the operating system's October 2009 launch, Webster's team knew the campaign would need both a high-impact message—and one that would build on the existing perceptions so skillfully set up by the now-legendary "I'm a PC" campaign. That series of TV spots via Crispin Porter + Bogusky effectively deflected Apple's poison darts with the message that PC users weren't just average joes, but in fact millions of highly creative people all over the world.
Read full article »
David Lauren, Ralph Lauren
By Robert Klara on Mon Sep 13 2010Which is why some did a double take three years ago, when select stores in New York and London cleared the baronial trappings from the front windows to make room for interactive touch screens—67-inch projections that invited passersby to browse the collections simply by pressing their fingers to the glass. Fancy that $425 cashmere V-necked cardigan? A quick swipe of your camera phone captured the corresponding QR code, and the sweater was on its way.
Read full article »
Russell Weiner, Domino's
By T.L. Stanley on Mon Sep 13 2010His palate had changed, as had the American consumer's, and the product itself had to evolve, Weiner says. But the marketing also needed refreshing, especially after a 2009 incident in which rogue Domino's employees posted a video of themselves doing disgusting things with the pizza on YouTube. The spectacle showcased social media's power to quickly unravel a brand and gave consumers one more reason to get their pizza elsewhere.
Read full article »
Tim Mahoney, Subaru
By David Kiley on Mon Sep 13 2010No wonder the company was languishing at around 180,000 sales a year, while brands like Honda, Nissan, Hyundai and Kia were climbing. Even Subaru loyalists had lost the plot.
Read full article »
Martine Reardon, Macy's
By Alex Palmer on Mon Sep 13 2010Read full article »
Tony Hsieh, Zappos
By Karen J. Bannan on Mon Sep 13 2010Read full article »