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Time to gadgetise your innovation strategy

Posted by on May 9, 2012
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I love a gadget.  I especially love taking things to pieces to see how they work, then trying to piece them back together afterwards.  It’s one of the things that drew me to innovation like a moth to a flame.

It struck me this morning, while absent-mindedly contemplating my new Gillette Power razor, that there are now more gadgets in my life than ever before.  It’s not just the obvious ones like the iPod, satnav, Kindle, Blackberry and so on, but a new breed of gadgets that has begun to spring up.  They not only offer time-saving convenience, but also new, bigger, brighter benefits too: better performance, better quality, better effectiveness… everything is being motorised, electrified and powered up.

So, as of last week, my partner no longer uses a flannel and cleanser to remove her make up.  She now has a bright pink Clarisonic Mia Skin Cleansing System (a large round, soft brush that oscillates on a shower-proof handle), which claims to use gentle sonic vibrations to “ensure you can enjoy smoother and more balanced skin, firmer skin with improved texture and less blemishes”.

If I want to whiten my teeth I no longer have to brush them with a whitening toothpaste; I can use a Rapid White Blue Light Tooth Whitening System, claiming to be “clinically proven to whiten teeth up to five shades in just two hours”.  If I want to make coffee I no longer have to boil a kettle and dissolve some instant coffee; I can use any number of surface-top devices to replicate the in-home coffee shop experience.  The list goes on, with hay fever relief products, cigarette alternatives, sexual pleasure enhancers, home decorating systems like the Dulux Paint Pod and Weathershield BackPack, room fragrance diffusers and even a new in-home hand soap dispenser… and we haven’t even touched on kids’ toys.

What does this mean for your innovation strategy?  If you haven’t already gadgetised, now is the time to start exploring new ways in which the existing benefits of your products can be further enhanced with a gadget.

Are you up to speed with kids’ brands and marketing?

Posted by on May 8, 2012
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Last week we published the latest edition of our quarterly Kidscan report, which presents a round-up of the news, stats and NPD that have caught our attention over the past three months.

Some of the developments we’ve looked at in this issue include:-

  • The spin-offs that have dominated children’s television viewing in the past quarter
  • How Fremantle Media’s Tree Fu Tom is winning the hearts of children and parents
  • Who’s reading e-readers
  • The outdoor toys catering to parents’ optimism…
  • …and the toys & board games catering to March and April showers
  • The tween & teen phenomenon that is the Hunger Games
  • Skylanders: Spyro’s Adventures – the dawn of a new era of toy/game interactivity?
  • The top toy superbrands
  • How smartphones are driving forward app-related toys
  • Bandai’s campaign to encourage father/son bonding
  • The return of the Morrisons Disney partnership
  • Tilda’s first dedicated children’s rice products
  • ’50 Things to do before you’re 11 3/4′ from the National Trust

With 60 pages of analysis, including news, stats and features from the UK kids & family marketing sector, it’s well worth a read. This issue, we’d like to thank our friends at Swapit for letting us share children’s top topics of conversation with you in ‘What Kids Are Talking About’, drawn from their tracker research into the brands kids find cool in the world of FMCG, media, retail and more.

If you’d like to receive a copy of Kidscan, would like to find out more about our recent work with kids or are interested in our thoughts on an issue you may have on kids or family-focused branding, strategy or innovation, please do give me a call or email me.

Plus if you’re on Twitter, you can follow The Value Engineers Kids & Family practice here, with daily tweets of the latest news and views from the sector.

Enjoy!

Making serendipity happen and other musings on social media

Posted by on April 5, 2012
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In the 1990s, digital was all about browsing.  The following decade brought search engines, and today we talk a lot about connecting online.  Facebook connects us to people from our past and those we meet in the present.  We can follow anyone and everything on Twitter, and now we can use social technology to create a spontaneous connection to people around us with similar interests.

This latest evolution in digital is called ‘social discovery’, and was the hot topic at this year’s SXSW festival.  Social discovery brands such as Highlight, Kismet, Sonar and Ban.Jo are GPS-enabled apps that allow users to learn more about others in their vicinity.

There are several interesting developments here.  To date, many of us have put a huge amount of effort into connecting and expanding our social network online.  Social Discovery changes this dynamic, encouraging users to emerge from the comfort of the digital world into the real one.  It’s great news for brands, as roughly 90% of all money is still being spent in the real world.

Second, social discovery apps leverage our interests rather than our existing networks to spark a connection.  Using information on our personal interests, these apps “passively monitor” the space around us, searching for people we should meet.  Paul Davison, founder and CEO of San Francisco-based Highlight explains his inspiration:

“What if you just sort of had this bird’s eye view of the world? [You could] play God and take two people and put them together… [We] love the ambient intimacy we get from looking into other people’s lives.”

I believe that in the pre-digital dark ages, this intimacy was often a result of being in the right place at the right time: an act of serendipity brought to us by fate.  My first reaction is to ask: where’s the romance? What is serendipity without its unpredictability? As we continue to share more and more personal moments online, I’m forced to wonder: are we losing out on real connections?

One thing is for sure: a fundamental shift is taking place in the way all of us are connecting as people.  We are exploring and hunting for more meaningful connections, which leaves me feeling optimistic about the future.  After all, all of this creates an incredible opportunity for brands to create more meaningful connections with consumers – and perhaps even be there for the moment when sparks fly!

Infamy, infamy! They’ve all got it in for me…

Posted by on March 15, 2012
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On this day in 44B.C. Julius Caesar was killed at the Theatre of Pompey.  While various versions of the story have been told throughout the years (including that which featured Kenneth Williams’ now infamous outburst), if you believe the version told by Shakespeare, Caesar had been warned by a soothsayer to: “Beware the Ides of March!”

Now that the Ides of March have come around in 2012, I’m wondering which brands could have been saved from a sticky end had they been more vigilant and heeded warnings.

We often refer to the complacency of the American railroad business in the 1920s, which led to them completely ignoring the threat posed by domestic air travel – which subsequently supplanted the train as the default mode for traversing the country.

However, there are more recent examples in which businesses have gone from industry leader to graveyard in just a few years.  In a world where change has become the one constant, the need to monitor consumers’ evolving needs and competitor activity is becoming ever more acute.

When Friends Reunited was bought by ITV in 2005 the competitive threat from Facebook was given little attention. The business believed that the two brands were targeting different audiences with different offers.  Six years later, Facebook has achieved a 49% penetration of the UK population – while Friends Reunited is estimated to be worth less than 5% of its 2005 value.

But who could have foreseen the meteoric rise of the Zuckerberg empire in such a youthful and ill-defined market?

Perhaps less deserving of sympathy are the management of Kodak, who oversaw the demise of the one of the world’s biggest consumer brands. The company from a market leading position - possessing 90% of film and 85% of camera sales in the USA in 1976 – to filing for Chapter 11 protection earlier this year.

To make the story even more damning, it was Kodak that invented the digital camera which ultimately led to the demise of its mainstream photographic film business.  In fact, Kodak executive Larry Matteson wrote a report in 1979 that detailed the predicted gradual shift from film to digital photography. It outlined the order in which market segments would be affected, predicting that digital photography would finally reach the mass market in 2010.  The prediction was remarkably prophetic, and accurate to within 5 years.

The changing landscape of the category came as no surprise to Kodak, nor to Fujifilm, which was in a similar situation at the turn of the 1980s. Yet Fujifilm managed to adapt, and remains a profitable business to this day. So what went wrong for Kodak?

Kodak was slow to act and had become complacent in its position as market leader.  It also had a culture of producing the ‘perfect product’, which slowed the speed-to-market of its innovations and limited the number of those innovations that made it to consumers.  Kodak was also slow to abandon its “razor blade” business model, whereby it sold cameras at low cost in order to make money on film sales (as Gillette does with blades). It was a model that was not compatible with the digital world.  By the time the firm finally developed a sizable digital camera business, the camera phone had taken over.  It was too late to execute change.

In contrast, Fujifilm listened to the soothsayer and avoided the theatre on the Ides of March.

But such a scale of change is notoriously difficult to predict, and even harder to react to successfully.  So what can brands do to help them avoid a similar fate to that of Caesar?

  • Take a long term view.  (Kodak was right to commission the report on where the photography category was going.  Its mistake was not acting on it in time.)
  • Think about all possible competitive threats, including those from suppliers, customers and new entrants.  (Think Porter’s 5 Forces. The attack may come from the least expected places. Does ‘Et tu, Brute?’ ring any bells?)
  • Don’t waste time developing the ‘perfect product’.  By the time it hits the shelves, your customers may have moved on.  (As they had done when Kodak finally got around to its digital business.  Facebook’s mantra is: “Move fast and break stuff.”)
  • Incorporate competitive war-gaming into the innovation process, in order to ensure that there are as many competitive barriers to entry as possible.  (Innocent has created a great product in its Veg Pots, yet has not managed successfully to defend its position from attack by own-label retailer copies.  Cf. Covent Garden Soups, which built trial and awareness through inner M25 c-stores, giving the business a decent timespan to refine the product and communications, as well as build a loyal user base.)

I wonder how many businesses today are sleepwalking slowly to disaster, with words of warning ringing in their ears…

Predicting the future

Posted by on February 25, 2012
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We have used a disruptive technique that we call ‘Shockwaves’  for number of years now. It’s loosely based on scenario planning and requires the invention of an extreme situation to get people to think about an almost unimaginable future scenario, and how they and their brands would respond to it.

I remember using the technique with a confectionery company. The Shockwave we introduced to ask the team to imagine that  sugar was treated as a harmful  substance and taxed in the same way as alcohol and tobacco. Despite initial incredulity, the team generated a range of interesting reponses.

Fast forward to today, when I’m reading the WSJ and an article catches my eye:

“Get ready for the War on Sugar – A team of scientists from the University of California, San Francisco, recently published a paper contending that sugar was toxic and addictive and should be regulated like alcohol and tabacco.”

Looks like I better dig out that workshop report…

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