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A Little Thought About Big Brands

A person’s feeling towards a brand is made up of the aggregation of their experiences with that brand layered one on top of another over time.

 

In the not so distant past, the vast majority of those experiences were controlled by us, the brand owner.  We created the experience through the product, in store and event or we served it up in a one-dimensional, passive mediated way to people through TV, radio, print etc.

 

The change that has come is not in the way that brands are created over time but in our loss of control over the mediation.

 

The most powerful force for vicarious experiences now is the connection between ordinary people.  The power of mediation is passing from our hands and from the hands of the media owner into the hands of the collective. And this mediation is now active – the mediators add their own spin whereas they never used to.

 

This leaves us with two routes for communication – create more stand-alone experiences ourselves and work with the fluid, active, multi-dimensional mediation of the collective.

 

And working with the collective - really working with them - will take us to a new place in our thinking about the way big brands need to behave.

 

A brilliant man I worked with once said "Brands exist in the minds of consumers" (Paul Feldwick, BMP) but right now, those minds are made public, become connected and are archived and searchable. 

 

We are all getting used to the idea of co-creation of content, but are we ready for the notion of co-curation of brands? 

 

All Comments

  September 9, 2009

Ivan

The assertion that 'In the not so distant past, the vast majority of those experiences were controlled by us' is not, in my opnion, even remotely accurate. Brand managers - whatever their budget, have never been more powerful than worth of mouth, 'symbolic customers',  or personal experience. And brands have and continue to assert things that consumers don't accept and therefore disregard.  So it goes.

So does social networking change anything at all besides the medai?

I'm not sure. Certainly the group of people I can 'call on' for WOM and 'observe (and therefore see as symbolic users)  is now much larger than ever. But these are changes in scale, not nature.

I'm afraid I don't understand what "fluid, active, multi-dimensional mediation of the collective" means, and therefore don't really understand what your premise is.  But if it means trying to get positive WOM while recognising that you can't just assert things and expect people to believe you, then as above, I think it is a change in degree, rather than nature.

  September 9, 2009

Ivan, surely this has always been the case? Brand owners have never had more than a small influence over the way people feel about their brands once they pass into the public domain. Any econometrics study will show advertising plays only a notional role in the sales of brand, be it a bank or a burger.

And people have always talked about brands they like and don't like to their friends. The only difference is now, thanks to the wonders of the interweb, comms planners can see their comments from the comfort of their own desk, without the bother of having to organise research groups.

Burberry, Porsche, Primark, RBS, the BBC and many others are powerful testament to the reality that brands are owned and moulded by the public, and there's not a lot advertisers can do to change or influence that.

  September 9, 2009

I agree with Ivan that something has fundamentally changed, although it is more about new patterns of behaviour and changing expectations than simply the emergence of social media.  People's relationship with brands and brand owners has changed (the reasons are complex)  - they want to get involved, they want to discuss things and share experiences with like-minded individuals and they want to be heard.    

  September 10, 2009

And this is news? to whom?

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Last login: 17 Oct 2009

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