Why is everybody customer oriented when the real opportunity is something totally different?

Why is everybody customer oriented when the real opportunity is something totally different?

May 1, 2016

What wins in marketing today? The conventional wisdom is “customer centricity.” As one pundit put it, Connect with customers based on their behavior or where they are in their purchase or life cycle.

Who can argue with that? I can.

Sedans or SUVs?

   In 2009, we started working in China with Great Wall Motor. At the time, the company made trucks, sedans, minivans and SUVs and marketed them under nine brand names: Coolbear, Deer, Florid, Haval, Lingao, Peri, Sailing, Socool and Wingle.

So what did we recommend? We recommended that the company focus on Haval, its SUV brand.

Why SUVs? The company’s research showed that Chinese customers preferred sedans because they were more prestigious.

On the other hand, Chinese customers thought SUVs were practical vehicles with no social status. So we figured the other 28 Chinese automobile companies would focus on sedans because they were customer oriented and that’s what Chinese customers wanted.

And that’s exactly what they did. Leaving the SUV field open for Great Wall to dominate. As a result of being competitor oriented (and not customer oriented) Great Wall became the largest, most-profitable Chinese automobile company.

What do customers want?

   If you ask customers what they want, they often say, I’m happy with the brands I buy, but I’d really like something better and cheaper.

That’s why companies spend billions of research & development dollars on Plan B. Developing “better” products and services.

Then they spend many additional dollars advertising their better products and services. But what do customers think when they see an advertising message for a better product?

Unless the brand is the market leader, they don’t believe the advertising. How can this be? If the brand were actually better, it would be the market leader.

Doesn’t the better brand win in the marketplace?

   Ironically, that’s what management also believes. The better product wins in the marketplace. Hence the emphasis on research & development.

Yet year after year, the same brands continue to maintain their leadership. Heinz in ketchup. French’s in mustard. Hellmann’s in mayonnaise. Land O’Lakes in butter. Campbell’s in condensed soup. Morton in salt. Domino in sugar. Swans Down in cake flour. Coca-Cola in cola. The list is endless.

So many companies move on to Plan C. Selling their better products and services at a “cheaper” price.

But if a brand is cheaper than its competitors, customers think it can’t be as good. Starbucks didn’t become successful by selling cheaper coffee.

   Heinz and Hunt’s.

What do customers think when they see a small bottle of Heinz ketchup selling for $1.89 and the same size bottle of Hunt’s ketchup selling for $1.49?

Hunt’s can’t be as good as Heinz.

Some consumers, of course, buy Hunt’s to save money . . . even though they consider the brand to be inferior to Heinz. So the lower price produces sales but makes it impossible for the brand to ever dominate the category.

If better and cheaper doesn’t work, then what does work?

Be different.

   Think different was the Apple slogan years ago and the same idea can work today. After the success of Red Bull, hundreds of energy drinks were launched in the American market. (In the four years between 2005 to 2008, there were 956 brands of energy drinks launched.)

Weren’t some of those 956 energy-drink brands better and cheaper than Red Bull? And didn’t some of those brands have the backing of a major beverage company? (Coca-Cola introduced three energy-drink brands: KMX, Tab energy drink and Full Throttle.)

So which brand became a strong No.2 to Red Bull? The better energy drink or the one that was different?

The one that was different. Monster, virtually the only energy-drink brand that was launched in a 16-oz. can, became a strong No.2 brand with 37 percent market share.

Full Throttle, the Coca-Cola brand, has a 1 percent market share.

Marketing is like warfare.

   In marketing, you compete with competitors for customers. In warfare, you compete with enemies for territory.

Focusing on customers in marketing is like focusing on territory in warfare. If your enemy knows your territorial objective in advance, it greatly simplifies its defensive strategy.

On June 22, 1941, Adolf Hitler launched the German invasion of the Soviet Union. The objective: Moscow in the north.

Six months and millions of casualties later, the German offensive was halted short of its objective.

So Hitler changed his strategy and launch a second major offensive on July 17, 1942. The new objective: Stalingrad in the south.

History repeated itself. Six months and millions of casualties later, the German offensive was halted short of its objective.

What should Hitler have done? He should have launched his attack in the middle of the country so his ultimate objective was in doubt.

   The line of least expectation.

That’s what B.H. Liddell Hart, the greatest military thinker of the 20th century, called this strategy and many powerful brands have followed this approach.

How many customers wanted more expensive coffee before Starbucks was launched? Very few.

How many customers wanted Greek yogurt before Chobani was launched? Very few.

How many customers wanted a “touchscreen” smartphone before the iPhone was launched? Very few.

When your brand takes The line of least expectation, you can be pretty sure no other brand will be doing the same thing. And that’s what builds powerful brands.

Being different.