Mais conteúdo relacionado Semelhante a Glasshouse Partnership - Transparency And Branding (19) Glasshouse Partnership - Transparency And Branding1. :
The past, present and future of transparency.
“Infodemocracy, and what it means for your brand” 2. Remember The Good Old Days?
What is it?
Who made it?
What’s it made from?
What does it taste like?
$5
Where does it come from?
How can I get one more cheaply?
Who would drink a beer like this?
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 3. 1950s-70s. The Opacity System…Focused on features and benefits. A great
model for an industrial economy.
• Opaque customers – marketing is based on inspired guesswork
• Opaque products – any colour you like, as long as it’s what we have in stock
• Opaque organisations – a golden age for conglomerates and aspiring monopolists
• Opaque markets – persuasion ethos. Consumers trapped by choice, location,
transportation and social class
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 4. Brand value =
Opacity
Premium
(n) Branding: the art of making money by concealing knowledge
from targeted customers
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 6. So why on earth would you change all that…?
Opacity:
• Enhances economic premiums
• Protects competitive advantage
• Develops deep emotional bonds and repeat purchase
• Obscures dubious sourcing, pricing and employment practices
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 7. So why change…?
STOP PRESS…
Retailers
Because Opacity:
start to
• is anti-customer
destroy opaque
• locks you into a single static proposition
brands by
copying
• blindsides you to alternative value models
SUPERFICIAL
FEATURES…
Opaque Brands concentrate and multiply
risk
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 8. 8
© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 9. (n) Branding: the art of making money by selectively
sharing knowledge with self-selecting customers
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 10. 10
© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 11. So why on earth would you change all that…?
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 12. So why change…?
STOP PRESS…
• is grounded in stories - not stakeholder Consumer
needs or organisational purpose
advocates destroy
• is still anti-customer – just selling translucent brand
bigger dreams
advantage by
• still locks you into static propositions – telling MORE
only with higher cost of change
TRANSPARENT
• still blinds you to alternative models –
STORIES…
only reinforcing self-delusion….
Translucent brands defuse and diffuse short-term
risk at the expense of long-term risk
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 13. “What does the future hold ?”!
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 14. But isn’t transparency a really bad thing…?
Jetbluehostage.com
Flickr.com/photos/filthywalmart
Greenpeace.org/apple
Exposeexxon.com
Complane.typepad.com
Ikeasuckz.blogspot.com
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 15. Only if you fight it…
You can always engage, answer
criticism, respond, adapt,
collaborate…
Open your doors, invite
stakeholders in and start to
learn…
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 16. MARTINI DIALOGUE
PUBLIC PASSIONS
Individual Social
Identity
Identity
THE BROADCAST SELF
SOCIAL NETWORKS
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 17. INFORMATION GLUTTONY
INDEPENDENT ENDORSEMENT
Trust
Trustworthiness
REAL-TIME COMPARABILITY
MARKETS-OF-ONE
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 18. COMPETING VALUE-WEBS
CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP
Internalise Externalise
externalities
internalities
ACCOUNTABLE PROCESS-CHAINS
INSTITUTIONAL LISTENING
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 19. LEAN PRODUCTION
CONSUMER INFOSTREAMS
Individual Collective
efficiency
effectiveness
PERFECT INFORMATION
CROWD CLOUT
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 20. Intention Aggregation
Potential for Intention Economics
Social Marketing
Potential for Social Marketisation
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 21. In summary: the twin forces of transparency…
The Marketisation of
everything
The New
“Social
Market”
The Socialisation of
everyone
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 22. (n) Branding: the art of making money by improving
decisionflow for any stakeholder
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 23. The rules of the new social market: “Information Symmetry”
1. Products: Whatever must be known can be known
2. Markets: Whatever can be known, must be made
known…
Infodemocracy
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 24. The rules of the new social market: “Social Symmetry”
1. People: Whoever must be known, can be made known
2. Organisations: How you know matters more than who
you know
Sociodemocracy
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 25. Prediction: This Social Market will play host to two long wars:
Power:
Who will be in charge of brands?
The war for primacy between demand-side
intentions and supply-side resources
Control:
Who will get most value from
individuals’ assets?
The war for control of social information
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 26. Who will win the wars? 2 predictions:
The Brand War
2020 ‘superbrands’ will be the best interpreters
of demand-side signals, not the best spinners
of supply messages…
The Identity war
2020 ‘superpeople’ will be empowered to
actively manage personal and social ROI from
their actions and intentions.
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 27. The Democratisation
of brands
The New
The Marketisation “Social The Socialisation
of everything
Market”
of everyone
The Liberation
of the individual
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 28. Scepticism
Listen
Learn
Integrity
Wider
Deeper
Assurance
History
Future
Collaboration
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 29. 10 Don’ts for your Corporate Marketing
1. rganisational Scepticism: Don’t drink the koolaid. Be
O
sceptical of your own organisation. The rest of the world will be.
2. Keep listening: Don’t assume that what you say is what
get’s heard. Understand the implications of your brand.
3. Keep learning: Don’t assume that your brand standards are
good enough. Align expectations, promises and performance –
constantly.
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 30. 4. Brand Integrity: Don’t imagine you can actually manage
reputation. Focus on managing your conduct.
5. Go deeper: Don’t stop with brand audits and
endorsements. Strive for brand assurance.
6. Go wider: Don’t stop at pleasing customers. Understand
all your stakeholders’ needs and understand your value
propositions to them.
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 31. 7. Brand Assurance: Don’t promise. Deliver, and
prove you’ve delivered.
8. Think future: Don’t just protect license to operate.
Build your ‘license to innovate’ by engaging with critical
permission-brokers.
9. Think history: Don’t copy. Use your own history.
Empower your hidden assets: product backstory, human
expertise, supply-chain processes and corporate purpose.
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 32. 10. Stakeholder Collaboration: Don’t compete on
the resources you own; compete on the resources you
can connect.
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership 33. Speaker biography
Tim Kitchin, Partner
Stakeholder Strategist
Tim Kitchin is a broad-based brand communications expert with extensive
experience of CSR, environmental and policy-making arenas. His passion is to
help organisations develop deeper, wider and more profitable stakeholder
relationships.
Tim is a founding partner of Glasshouse Partnership and an associate senior
adviser to ethical thinktank AccountAbility,
He is also member of brand think-tank, the ‘Medinge Group’, responsible for
the annual ‘Brands with a Conscience’ awards, was a member of the
international advisory panel for the UN Environment Programme’s ‘Talk
the Walk’ initiative and special editor of the journal of brand management
for its first issue on CSR.
He was a co-author of ‘managing corporate reputations’ and ‘Beyond
Branding’ (both Kogan Page).
Tim leads Glasshouse’s brand integrity practice.
Contact: timk@glasshousepartnership.com
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© Copyright Glasshouse Partnership