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"Postmodernism is a change-or-be-changed world. The word is out: Reinvent yourself for the 21st century or die! Some would rather die than change." Leonard Sweet, cultural historian.

Looking beyond your brand

The Holy of marketing Holies, your brand, is no longer a guarantee for the future, according to a provocative report in the New York Times. The article focuses on AT&T, but offers an important look into one of the most dangerous trends in American business today — relying on brand until it’s too late.

Famous brands have faded before, of course, but the impact of deregulation, galloping technology, marketing clutter and increasing global competition has made it harder than ever for established brands to stay on top. That is especially true when a dominant player in a market fails to react to change, allowing new and aggressive rivals to innovate with products or pricing.

No one is suggesting that brands are not important. But increasingly, marketing experts say, companies that think their brands will insulate them against competition are in for a shock. The reverse is more likely to be true, marketers say: the brand will not compensate for missteps, but missteps will devastate the brand.

The increased competition in many industries underscores the new reality that few brands can be all things to all people. “The metaphor for American society is no longer the melting pot; it’s the quilt,” Mr. Donatiello (Nicholas Donatiello, president of Odyssey, a San Francisco research firm) said. “People no longer want to watch the same television show or use the same toothpaste.”

Local TV is a business that relies too much on brand, in my opinion, and it’s one of the reasons it’s so threatened. Brand emphasis hasn’t stopped the accelerating audience drain, and it’s doing little in terms of driving people to monolithic TV Websites. Brand emphasis is a problem, because it doesn’t recognize the most important reality about business today — that the seller’s market illusion is gone, long gone, and that consumers are clearly in charge. Television is a limited medium, and it had better wake up to that fact — and quickly. If you want to continue as “The Weather Authority” in your market, you’d damned well better be that across all mediums, including the Internet. And here’s the kicker. “The Weather Authority” isn’t the TV station; it’s much bigger. It’s a multimedia world we’re in, of which TV is just a part. Your TV brand will NOT protect you in this multimedia environment.

Moreover, brand reliance puts the focus on you and not your audience or users or community. I realize that’s a fine line, but in a “no demand for messages” world, why spend your energy crafting beautiful messages that nobody wants? Get involved in the conversation. That’s where everybody’s going while you’re massaging your brand.

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This entry was posted on Monday, July 26th, 2004 at 8:15 am and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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With the exception of the essays entitled "TV News in a Postmodern World," all material created by Terry L. Heaton and included in this Weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.