Business comes first, unless of course marketing comes first

June 14, 2010

Mistakes.  We all make them and when the mistake is made by a big brand it is more difficult than ever to make it go away.

But what’s really noticeable these days is that often it’s not the mistake that’s important, it’s how you deal with it.  Every brand (with a handful of exceptions) is there to drive a business.  So what do you do when the brand decision and the business decision are directly conflicting?

Today Asda was in the news for inadvertently publicising a £75 discount on their website.  Of course  a brand can legally withdraw this sort of thing and not go through with the sale.  The impact of this has been some fairly negatively PR which has made it to the front of BBC news.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/10312959.stm

And it’s difficult to argue with the business case.  If you legally don’t have to sell the goods you were offering at a loss then why take the hit?

But compare this with what happened to Zappos’s sister site in the US last month.  They made a similar error which amounted to a $1.6million loss (compared with the Asda loss which seemingly is in the low thousands of pounds if you believe their spokesperson).

http://econsultancy.com/blog/5960-zappos-lives-up-to-its-reputation-for-customer-service

But because of Zappos’s absoulte belief in ‘customer first’ they came out and said “our balls up – we’ll honour all purchases”.  And off the back of that they get large volumes of positive PR and stay true to their brand values.

http://about.zappos.com/our-unique-culture/zappos-core-values

What this really highlights is the difficulty in making qualitative marketing decisions when faced with a quantifiable business case. Asda knew that they could save several thousand pounds by not honouring the incorrect purchases. They knew that they might have got positive or negative PR depending on how they handled it but this would all have been speculation.  So they went with the business case.  But given that they claim to be ‘saving you money every day’ they could easily have made a lot of positive mileage out of honouring these mistaken sales.

This is of course if the decision went anywhere near someone with a marketing hat on.  Could you quantify the case for letting the sales go with any certainty?  I’m not sure if I’d have won the battle faced with a spreadsheet with a number at the bottom.

What would you have done?  I would like to think I’d have behaved like Zappos because I come from a marketing background and I’m sure my business consultant friends would have taken the Asda route every time.

Every case needs to be taken on its merits but brands need to understand that increasingly, every business decision has a marketing effect.  And just because that marketing effect can’t be measured or predicted as accurately, doesn’t mean it’s the wrong thing to do.

Campaigns with a participative prize

December 15, 2009

I noticed an ad for this in the Metro this morning

www.californiacalling.co.uk

We’ve all come across campaigns that ask people to do things in return for a ‘money can’t buy prize’.  Now ordinarily I would applaud this participative approach to marketing but I’ve begun to realise that there’s some of these campaigns that I like and some that make me feel a bit uncomfortable.  And I’ve worked out what it is.

The good ones are those for which the prize is rooted in the real world – Queensland tourism ‘Best Job in the World’, Walkers ‘Do us a flavour’ etc

The suspect ones are those for which the prize is to appear in an ad.  It’s incredible how many of these there are (Wispa, Oxo, Doritos etc).  I would argue that twenty years ago giving someone the opportunity to appear in an ad was quite exciting.  Doritos just about got away with it because the spot in question was during the Superbowl.  But nowadays, with a bit of effort and creativity I can make myself famous without the need to appear in a TV ad for a brand that I probably don’t care too much about.  Why be in an ad in the middle of X-Factor when I can actually be in X-Factor?

So next time you present a campaign idea that asks people to do something in return for a prize try to refrain from the prize being ‘to appear in an ad’.

Agency Videos – Christmas or otherwise

December 14, 2009

A little flurry of agency videos has just hit the interweb and the reaction has been mixed to say the least.  Producing an agency video has always been fraught with potential disaster.  What’s bloody hilarious to all your employees may well induce nausea and vomiting in the wider world and I’m struggling to think of a good one.  Which is why making one when the only U-Matic copy was held safely in a locked room was probably OK but now it’s up on Youtube the whole world are ready to throw their rocks at a moment’s notice.  It is now safe to assume that Dare will produce a proper turd in the next year……

Three exhibits

1) The original and probably still the best – Mindshare Amsterdam working hard for their client’s money.

http://www.brandnewtelly.com/mindshare/

2) Lean Mean re-penning ‘Do They Know It’s Christmas’ as ‘Do they know it’s web 2.0′.  I’m not sure I want to know but it’s all for charidee.

3) Publicis – ‘I gotta feeling’ – So have I and I think I might need a Rennies


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