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With many great strategy and branding insights at the marcus evans Customer Segmentation Conference last week, we’ll take several days to recap them. Brand building lessons abound, even if you’re not in a brand’s traditional target market. Two great examples were featured at the conference: Food Network and Bliss Spas. Both address customer segmentation and its branding impacts.

The Food Network

Michael Smith, Senior VP – Marketing, Creative & Brand Strategy from Food Network covered its dramatic 10-year growth (from 42nd ranked to 19th ranked network) driven by segmenting a niche market and programming to reach non-traditional viewers. Its initial target was gourmands. While an attractive audience, it didn’t offer particularly attractive growth.

Following several customer segmentation efforts, the network saw opportunities to broaden its audience through other segments:

  • “Pressed for Timers” wanted quick recipes and meal prep solutions
  • “Adventurers” combined food and lifestyle interests seeking entertainment, escape, and discovery

This customer segmentation helped create day part-based sub-brands addressing these needs. “In the Kitchen” became the daytime sub-brand, with learning-oriented programs delivering meal solutions. “Nighttime” programming links food to travel, history, and reality TV styled competitions. Hosts cross both sub-brands to link the network’s programming.

Bliss Spa

The Bliss Spa case study was presented by Kerry O’Day, its Marketing & Publissity Director. The Bliss Spa story is a great example of tying all customer experience points to the brand’s foundation to maximize branding impacts. With a vision of making people’s lives more relaxed, fun, and less stressful, the brand’s personality embodies being:

  • “Tongue in chic” (to make people smile)
  • A spa-thority (using its credibility as a spa service provider to extend into products)
  • A place for “You Time” (playing on the emotional benefits of its services and products for target consumers)

The Bliss brand, with limited dollars, was originally built on public relations and unconventional marketing. Even with more dollars now, its unconventional approach is an integral part of Bliss. One example? The spas serve small brownie bites – an indulgence that doesn’t feel that way since they’re so tiny! Bliss turned the challenge of finding local bakers into a contest, creating customer participation in brownie selection and driving website activity.

Three Take-Aways on Customer Segmentation and Branding Impacts

  • Michael Smith said successfully identifying and implementing segmentation is as much art as science. While Food Network did a lot of segmentation work, creating the specific sub-brands and programs came down to making solid, insight-filled business decisions and accepting risk.
  • I love brands where everything comes from a strategic foundation (Southwest Airlines is a favorite example). Given it’s still growing, Bliss accomplishes this through continuity in people around at its start, hiring people fitting its brand personality, and doing creative in-house. It will be fun to watch how its brand continuity plays out amid future growth.
  • There’s always value in guerrilla marketing (or as Bliss would probably call it, “Girlrilla” Marketing). Check out this link for questions to help enhance your list of guerrilla marketing tools. - Mike Brown

The Brainzooming Group helps make smart organizations more successful by rapidly expanding their strategic options and creating innovative plans they can efficiently implement. We draw on our varied strategy experience in defining new brands, jump starting lagging ones, and  rehabilitating battered brands. Email us at info@brainzooming.com or call us at 816-509-5320 to learn how we can help you enhance your strategy and implementation efforts.

 

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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This year was an unusual one to begin blogging. Amid challenging business and economic conditions (which provide a lot of potential material), my typical creative times (on planes) and stimuli (travel and exposure to new, external ideas) have been in short supply while creating five posts weekly on strategy and innovation.

That’s why I’ve relished opportunities to interact and learn from other marketers and business people at the various events I’ve been fortunate enough to speak at this year. They’ve provided a wonderful source of material, and the current conference is no exception.

Yesterday included two sessions at the marcus evans Customer Segmentation conference in Miami – one on Brainzooming and the other an interactive exchange where the group shared segmentation best practices in an exercise called, “90 Second Solutions.” There were a number of interesting presentations from a variety of companies that I’ll recap next week.

As we wrap up Anniversary Week, thanks for reading the blog and remember – let me know what you’re thinking and what you’d like to see here in the coming year!

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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This is the last planned post from The Market Research Event (TMRE) – 4 intense days with so many learning and insight opportunities to share!

  • TMRE runs its conference with 5 minutes breaks – never seen anything like it. Hats off to them for making it work since it adds at least three more educational sessions in a 3-day conference. That translates directly into increased value for participants.
  • Interesting how many research companies include orange in their color pallets. Like that a lot! Every research company describes itself as a “full service market research company.” Doubt that a whole lot!
  • Disneyland isn’t Disney World. Granted, I was last at Disney World more than a decade ago. At the time though, it appeared to be the epitome of smart marketing, managing all conceivable elements of customer experience. Disneyland clearly doesn’t. (Quick examples – no mention of going to the park at check-in, the early-order breakfast door hanger was never replaced after using it the first day, and a bag’s worth of crushed pretzels remained on the floor overnight without being cleaned up). So, what’s not happening?
  • Disneyland note pads feature Mickey ears and the phrases
    “Ideapad” and “Inspire. Innovate. Dream.” at the top. COOL! And it has meeting rooms called “Adventure” and “Fantasy.” COOL!! But when you put the pads in basement level rooms with low ceilings, poor lighting, and no windows, it’s a little more challenging to inspire, innovate, and dream.
  • Despite my mini-rants above, how much happier would your workplace be if the background music played “Zippity Do Dah,” “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,” and “The Mickey Mouse Club Theme” in heavy rotation?

And if you haven’t gotten enough about TMRE yet, go over to my Schmoozii post from yesterday about the concept of “creative consumers.” It’s the snarkiest post I’ve done yet, although I do realize Barrett that it isn’t all that snarky…but I’m working on it!

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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I got to hang out at The Market Research Event (TMRE) with a couple of my “research kids.” It was great to see how they’ve continued to advance in their careers.

This week, make a short list of your “business kids” – the people you’ve worked with and helped shape that have moved on to other places. If it’s been awhile, give them a call, see how they’re doing, and find out if they’re headed to any conferences in the near future. If they are, and you can see your way clear to do it, join them, do some learning, and get a Brainzoom from seeing how they’ve grown since leaving home.

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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There were two great keynotes at “The Market Research Event” on Thursday, the final day of the conference at Disneyland.

Marcus Buckingham

Perennial best-selling author Marcus Buckingham spoke about building your strengths and his new book, “The Truth About You.” He related a funny story about his son, who has shown himself to be a substandard artist in kindergarten. Despite Buckingham’s work on developing your strengths in lieu of the futility of addressing your weaknesses, he noted that he and his wife were quick to consider remedial art training, missing their son’s demonstrated aptitude in math.

Dan Ariely

The other great keynote was from Dan Ariely, author of “Predictably Irrational.” He shared background from his book on how our eyes and brain both work to skew our view of reality and cloud the ability to process information rationally. It looked like the temporary bookstore in the trade show area was doing a brisk business in his book at the morning break. It’s definitely worth checking out if you’re in the business of asking people questions and trying to predict what they may do.

Question for readers – This is the first week in quite some time where EVERY article was written within hours of its morning posting. Like it? Don’t like it? Didn’t notice the difference? Leave a comment to let me know what you think.

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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It’s wrap-up day for The Market Research Event (TMRE). Here are a few highlights from a various sessions this week:

These are just a few of the insights and idea starters. We’ll cover more in the future, along with an update to the ongoing series on what poor presenters should stop doing.

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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The standout presentation Tuesday at The Market Research Event was from W5, a market research company based in Durham, NC. The session was on “Design Driven Deliverables,” defined as “any method of communicating research findings that goes beyond the standard research report.”

This topic has been of great interest to me; it’s unfortunately often met with blank stares. As Steve Kulp and Lisa Broome from W5 discussed expanding the range of media used to communicate research results, my thought was, “Maybe I’m not as crazy as I thought, or at least they’re crazy in the same way I am!”

W5 considers four types of design driven deliverables:

  • Graphic – Results depicted visually in posters, booklets, stickers, note cards, etc.
  • Sensory – Stimuli that engage the senses in various ways, including textures, audio, video, and smells.
  • Experiential – An interactive presentation of results in ideation sessions, dramatization, experiential tours, immersion rooms.
  • Installation – Physical environments that convey understanding, including displays, large scale murals, shadow boxes, and artifact installations.

They showed examples that demonstrated meaningful, story-based depictions of research data going beyond simply reporting statistical differences. Check out more information through W5 white papers on this and other topics at company’s website.

Follow-up note - here’s a recap video shot right after Monday’s strategic thinking session. It’s posted on YouTube!

Mike Brown

Founder of The Brainzooming Group, and a huge fan of strategy, creativity, and innovation. Mike is a frequent speaker on innovation, strategic thinking, and social media.

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