Aspirational Design

October 5th, 2011 by Caitlin Rose

Human beings are unhappy. We are born wanting more.

Chris Heile suggests that marketers are guilty of making empty promises to consumers, ultimately leading them to constantly want more. The AdClub recently hosted the Digital Non-Conference where our very own Chris Heile provided a keynote presentation that was both inspirational and thought provoking. Chris posed the question: Do we really believe everything promised to us in a commercial or advertisement? It made me re-evaluate the relationships I have with brands.

I’ll admit, I am a loyal “girly” magazine reader. I’ll spend $5 on magazines with headlines such as “how to get sexier hair” and “his girlfriend wishlist.” I always want to know the next best thing and how I can get my hands on it. Similarly, I can only assume that men reach to magazines such as Men’s Health to discover how to get “your best body ever” and to “download this—and live longer!” Seems pretty ridiculous, right?

In their new commercials, Toyota suggests that if you’re a middle-aged couple you could instantly have more friends than your teenage son or daughter and a more active, fun lifestyle just by purchasing a Venza.

All of these empty promises made by marketers leave us wanting more. Based on a study by Michael Eysenck, Chris suggests that when we finally have the financial stability to audaciously spend on a Lamborghini, we’re instantly not rich enough and must get rich enough to buy a Maybach. When something good happens to you, like buying that new car, you’ve reached a new threshold and you are now driven to supersede it.

Chris suggests that relationships today between marketers and consumers, are “one night stands,” and that they should be long-term relationships of mutual growth with the thought that they are better together than apart. That’s what we want in our human relationships, right? So why should it be any different than the relationships we develop with the products we buy?

That’s where aspiration comes in. Aspirations are fulfilling. They are tied to values and beliefs. They reflect fundamental truth. They don’t require validation from others.

Exhibit A: Janet Champ’s Nike ads circa 1990.

That is not an empty promise- that is aspiration. Pulling at our heartstrings causing us to develop a life-long, spiritual connection to the brand.

Chris went on to explain the deeply personal connections that aspirational design creates, for example, Apple. What can you not create with an iSomething? Chris showed an entertaining family video that he created with his iPhone, iPad, iMovie- catch my drift? Apple pushes boundaries and provides their loyal consumers with the tools they need to enhance their lives.

Tom’s shoes builds their brand on the promise that they will donate a pair of shoes to kids in need for every pair you buy. How awful am I for not owning a pair? And that’s exactly the point: brands need to build long-lasting promises with their consumers.

A consumer knows when you’re insincere in your efforts. They can see right through your attempt to increase your top and bottom line. Consumers have the tools, now more than ever, to research your brand and everything it stands for. Then they make a decision based on their research. The greatest opportunity brands face is a lack of understanding their consumer. Understand your audience and what you mean to your desired audience. Target those who have the greatest potential for growth and find out what they are trying to achieve in their lives along with what their values are. If you understand your consumers, they will build a long lasting relationship with your brand.

Chris left us with some final thoughts:

1. Don’t simply look at consumers and where they are today. They want you to lead them to the next step and add value to their lives.

2. We have a responsibility. As marketers, we touch and influence many lives, we should impact them.

3. They grow. We grow. Consumers grow because of us, we grow because of them.

“You are not here merely to make a living. You are here in order to enable the world to live more amply, with greater vision, with a finer spirit of hope and achievement. You are here to enrich the world, and you impoverish yourself if you forget the errand.” – Woodrow Wilson

And last but not least, we, as marketing and technology professionals, are doing great work. Continue to help people and push them forward.

Posted in Design, Thinking | No Comments »

Which is evolving faster, brands or technology? The not so surprising answer.

September 16th, 2011 by chris.heile@hyperquake.com

Brands have always leaned heavily on technology. One might even say that brands owe their very existence to technology. After all, television, radio and print are what created mass brands in the first place. In the early days, we didn’t need to know how these analog systems worked or how to get the most out of them. Much like the computer you’re reading this on now, it didn’t require a technical degree to use it.

Today, technology is infiltrating every corner of our lives and with it has come an explosion of new interaction points with consumers. Clearly, our understanding of how technology works and how to use it as marketers must evolve. And in a dramatic way.

No longer can we get by without understanding the inner workings of these interrelated systems. We need to know how to customize and manipulate the many diverse parts to best fit our unique consumers and our unique brands. To be successful, we have to think more like programmers and less like users. Traditional media, social media, mobile media, web media, websites, blogs, CRM, SEO, SEM and everything new and exciting lurking around the corner must be mastered and programmed in order to see its true potential. And we haven’t even scratched the surface.

Every technology has a precise purpose and a particular effect. Each touch-point influences and appeals to very different groups of consumers. We now have the ability to program and optimize this vast network of technologies and media in our favor. To test out and prove what truly impacts sales, awareness, loyalty and short and long term growth. To eliminate waste and redundancy and track how every penny we spend drives consumer action.

To succeed in this increasingly complex, technology-laden world, we must be world-class hackers, manipulating data and technology to our own benefit.

Take advantage of this immense power and use it wisely to the peril of your competition.

Posted in Technology, Thinking, Uncategorized | No Comments »

There is a future for social media. We just haven’t seen it yet.

February 7th, 2011 by chris.heile@hyperquake.com

We’ve been keeping ourselves busy these days amassing our many thousands of online connections: facebook friends, twitter feeds, linked-in colleagues, news feeds, blogs, celebrities, magazines, favorite brands, et al.

Where does it all end?

How many people, places, things can we possibly keep up with at any given time?

Fortunately humans are equipped with a little something called selective hearing, which is our natural defense against over stimulation and the inevitable insanity that follows. But as of late, our over-connected world has caused a bit of rapid human evolution. It has lead to a highly-developed filtering system that allows us to instantly bypass comments, communications and blurbs from those less interesting to us. Proof is in your uncanny ability to fly through hundreds of facebook posts in seconds, always seeming to find the interesting nuggets and subconsciously breezing by the inane comments from friends you know are simply inane.

But as of yet, technology has had surprisingly little to add to this filtering system. Today it simply acts as a gatherer. Tomorrow it needs to act as hunter.

Think of it this way, much of the information we gather can be extremely valuable in certain contexts, even the mundane stuff.

When you’re planning a trip with a group of friends, everyones commentary is important at that particular instant. When you’re going shopping, all the brand information, sales, promotions, comparisons are extremely valuable.

Marketers more than anyone need to recognize this. As personal networks grow, being selected as part of a consumer’s vast network of connections may be nothing more than facebook wallpaper. But in the right context, those connections are extremely useful and greatly desired.

Technology needs to take control, bucketing all of our varied connections into useful groups and more importantly, bringing relevant connections to the forefront precisely when and where they are most useful for us.

As much as we’d like to think otherwise, these networks can’t grow forever. There is a tipping point. Marketers should take some responsibility here. Maybe even become part of the solution. Either that or there will be a cataclysmic house cleaning in our future.

Posted in Technology, Thinking | 242 Comments »

Have Tivo and the DVR Finally Met Their Match?

January 27th, 2011 by Chris Strong

No way I say!

Apparently, someone out there has come up with “a way” to trick people into hitting the play button early when they are fast forwarding through the commercials recorded content on their Tivo or cable company’s DVR. I guess not everyone out there fully believes that people don’t like to be force-fed commercials for stuff they don’t want or like, when they are watching TV…

(more…)

Posted in News | 231 Comments »

Glassjaw Figures Out How To Fix Music Industry: Selling Vinyl At Local Pizza Parlour

November 12th, 2010 by Chris Strong

Yep, this is pretty much awesome. So awesome, that I had to post it.

So, Long Island, NY’s hardcore heroes, Glassjaw, are apparently releasing a new 7″. Now, you have to understand that Glassjaw hasn’t released an album in like 7 years, so this is pretty big. These guys helped define a genre, so a lot of people are going to be pumped about this.

Now the things is, in 7 years, a lot about the music industry has changed. That’s why the way Glassjaw is releasing this EP is so awesome.

Basically, you want the 7″, you go to…….. Mario’s Pizzeria…… in Seaford, New York.

It’s probably too late by the time you read this to get a copy (head over to eBay and over pay if you’re interested). The best though, was that to get the vinyl you had to order “The Glassjaw” upon which you’d be presented with the “7-inch personal pizza” for $11.11

The band is inviting fans to visit the restaurant and order the “The Glassjaw” to get the “7-inch Personal Pizza” for $11.11.

Best part is the ad they took out for it:

Posted in Design | 19 Comments »

The Car of Your Dreams – The 2011 Mediocrity

October 21st, 2010 by Chris Strong

So, Subaru doesn’t really make ‘mediocre‘ cars. Take the WRX for example, it’s pretty loud, pretty flashy and pretty darn fast.

Heck, the picture below just makes it look fast. If it wasn’t, why else would it need that big wing to keep it planted on the ground?

Fast!

Now, Subaru does make sedans and no offense to anyone that drives sedans, but the sedan market does tend to be a bit boring and seems to be getting even duller. Things tend to run together and styles tend to be a bit blah.

Well, Subaru apparently took note of this and recently decided that they’d mess with people a little bit and get some heads scratching via an uber-sneaky viral marketing campaign for a car dubbed the Mediocrity. To give you a better overview than I ever could, check out the video below.

The video had me laughing quite a bit after I stumbled onto it and after checking out the 2011 Mediocrity website I was only laughing that much more.

The car of your dreams

The Mediocrity site is a trip. From the descriptions of colors and interior appointments, to the shopping tools and mission statement, I enjoyed every bit of it and had a good laugh a few times. (I still laugh when I read ‘Inoffensive Steel Exhaust’ on the comparison page). I also love that one of the choices as you build your car is a wicker chair. Why? I don’t know, but wicker isn’t really offensive and that’s a good thing when it comes to mediocrity.

As a viral campaign, many have speculated as to whether it is a success or failure because the site itself and everything else around it points to Subaru from the start (check the redirect in the URL when you go to www.2011Mediocrity.com). I tend to lean towards this being a good campaign and one that obviously wasn’t trying to be super viral. It’s quirky and fun as a campaign and just a good time. As someone who isn’t in the market for a car, it got me to spend some time with the brand (even after I went to the Mediocrity site) and that’s certainly not bad.

Now, if I can just get my wife on board with me getting that WRX STi I’ve always wanted…

Posted in Design | 190 Comments »

The Top 5 Mobile Advertising Trends To Watch

September 8th, 2010 by Chris Strong

Confused by mobile marketing? Yeah, so is everyone else these days it seems.

Mobile is definitely a hot bed of marketing opportunity for brands, but with so many variables when it comes to ad sizes, units, phone operating systems, etc., it almost seems like the Wild Wild West (as it has for the last few years).

The reality as I see it, is that mobile advertising offers some pretty unique opportunities to engage with consumers 1 to 1 on a device that has become more of a part of their life (and quite frankly almost an extension of their body) than any other single piece of technology.

Prove it? 90% of the US Population apparently owns cell phones according to a recent study by CTIA Media.

That represents a pretty great opportunity to reach consumers through a variety of different channels, problem is everyone thinks a different one is the right one or THE avenue for mobile advertising success. Then there is the host of new mobile technologies that keep coming into play from Apps, to Geo-Location solutions, to Video and the hows and whats of marketing in this complex and very untouched landscape just becomes more and more fishy. From SMS, to Rich Media units, to video the opportunities it just seems endless and growing non-stop.

So, what’s the solution? I don’t believe that anyone really knows yet, but I do know that this story on the Top 5 Mobile Advertising Trends To Watch recently posted on Mashable provides a good analysis and look into what to keep a pulse on moving forward. My thanks go out to @tempspaz for sharing this with me.

One thing is for sure, with all the new technology coming our way in the mobile category and continued improves on data networks, the next few years are going to be a fun time for consumers and marketers alike.

Posted in Technology, Thinking | 274 Comments »

KFC & the Japanese digital coupon fiasco

April 26th, 2010 by Chris Strong

You know that feeling where you want some KFC so bad that you’ll do anything to get it? And if anything or anyone gets in your way, you’ll go crazy and start flipping tables/chairs or staging sit-ins right?

GIMME MY CHICKEN

Well, imagine you want that KFC, you have a coupon you got off the internet and you go to get your chicken on and the staff at your local fried chicken establishment won’t take your coupon.

What else is there to do but cause a riot, right?

Hard to believe, but it happened in Japan last week. Next time someone has to be a bit more careful to ensure fraudulent digital coupons can’t be made. But hey, it shows digital couponing works if the offer is good enough!

http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/nontraditional/e3i2bf7a2a5a7ec6db2ebe035d420ef018c

Posted in News | 183 Comments »

Crafty approach to market a Craft beer

April 13th, 2010 by Chris Strong

Miller Coors, the No. 2 U.S. brewer, is getting ready to launch a new craft beer, that is brewed in small quantities and is marketed exclusively through digital and word-of-mouth channels.

Normally I don’t geek out over things like this because the marketing approaches don’t tend to be all that inspiring, engaging or revolutionary after you dig into them a bit, but this one has me hooked.

3-coloradonative-040510

For starters, the brew, Colorado Native Lager, is unique in that it that it uses “99.9%” Colorado-grown ingredients, a percentage that includes the locally made glass bottles.”

That serves as the starting point for what the brewer has used to its marketing advantage in the past with beers like Blue Moon; creating a feeling of ‘discovery’ in consumers. The thing about a craft beer, a small-lot single vineyard wine, or an underground band, is that not everyone knows about it of course. Whether through purely knowing or consuming, the consumer feels a level of prestige or exclusivity. Nana-nana-boo-boo…. (See also: “Heineken drinkers are posers“)

To create that feeling, the brand is apparently putting all its eggs in one basket; that basket being digital marketing via social and mobile media. But what’s taking it to the next level is the ‘SnapTag.’ Tags will be on every bottle and users can take photos of the tag with their mobile device, text it to a specified number. From there the brand can engage in digital discussions with the drinkers, which further down the road will lead to customized marketing efforts directed to each users. Great way to generate engagement, build loyalty and just enhance intrigue.

There is so much more to the program and I definitely recommend taking a quick read of the article on Ad Age. It’s definitely apparent that the brand seems committed to being a part of their consumers lifestyles and finding ways to evolve with them.

Of course, there will be debate by beer afficianados over whether this is a true craft beer brand (see Blue Moon), but regardless of that it’s great to see the brand taking a different approach to reaching its consumer and truly giving them something special.

It will be sold only in Colorado, at least at first.

Posted in Design, Thinking | 6 Comments »

Understanding Gen-Y

May 20th, 2008 by admin

Anyone who’s had to study this elusive generation knows that they are a hard group to pin down. The constant influx of media, information and changing trends has shaped a generation of kids who are nimble, picky multi-taskers who reject being marketed to and crave specialness and individuality. Finally, Fullbleed.org has compiled a comprehensive list of Gen-Yers to make sense of it all.

Posted in Design | 126 Comments »