Clean Launch

Launching a new program, a new campaign, or relaunching a brand is not just a Marketing function.

When a brand needs to adjust to its market, Marketing leads the charge with new and improved logo, websites, collateral, visual assets, PR and ad campaigns as needed to close the perceptual gaps documented by its research. It can make all the adjustments by itself, and work with Sales to direct the transformation in the relative sterility of its operating room bubble. In many cases that is enough to register on the metrics by which the Marketing nurse is evaluated.

That is the way most SMBs and many public companies do it. And pay a price.

Marketing mirrors the vascular system of the business. If the blood flow is weak, if some organs don’t get enough oxygen, if the blood is contaminated, the business will show signs of poor health.

Too often other parts of the business are left out of the launch process until the last phase. Too often Marketing will act in elitist isolation, and place other departments in reactive mode. Too often management fails to recognize the nutrients that feed the growth of silos.

A launch affects all aspects of a business, whether it is a new line, a new service, a new product, or a brand refresh; implicating all departments early translates into better preparation and execution. The launch wheel illustrates critical arteries management needs to keep clean to insure resource and cultural alignment. Each department has a role to play and must be included in the launch planning process to adapt to the new market realities.

Transition Marketing

The world is in profound transition- political, economic, environmental, and social. Nothing is spared. No aspect of life can survive without course correction. No one knows the outcome ten years from now, no one can tell where the next Black Swan will land. From the great transition to a clean economy, to women and minorities sharing power, shifting away from male hierarchies, the splintering of society into value dominated identities will intensify until a new order emerges, possibly decades from now. In the intervening turmoil, brands and branded services will need to reaffirm their commitment to their core promise, and stay clear of politics while toeing literate guidelines.

Brands who find original and contemporary expressions of their essence will stay relevant. That is what marketing does. It holds a mirror to segments of the market and reflects ideal images, it seduces by flattering desires. Without minding the consequences, it fuels consumption without direction. In the great transition, that won’t do anymore. To maintain, or build trust with users, brands now need to exercise restraint. Marketing is not about increasing revenues anymore, but about focusing on the quality of revenues it attracts. And that requires intelligent course corrections. It requires creative marketing reflecting responsible corporate values.