Thursday, November 27, 2014

Starving Your Children – A Brand Portfolio Management Conundrum



“A great empire and little minds go ill together” – Edmund Burke

Benjamin Franklin was a complex American statesman. Born in America in the years when it was still a colony of Great Britain, he achieved fame as a newspaper publisher, postmaster, inventor, public affairs commentator and politician. It was he who helped define the very concept of a middle class - shopkeepers and tradesmen who pulled themselves up by their “bootstraps” - with his articles published in ‘Poor Richard’s Almanac’, as well as several other articles he wrote in his name and under countless pseudonyms. 

In the series of events that provoked the American people to demand their independence from the British Crown, Benjamin Franklin wrote a piece that struck to the heart of British imperialism. He questioned the propriety of the English Parliament passing laws that sought to limit the establishment of manufacturing industries in the Americas to ensure that goods produced in England would have a captive market.  Britain’s policy would use America as a source of raw materials and a market for finished goods. Benjamin Franklin said, “…therefore Britain should not too much restrain manufactures in her colonies. A wise and good mother will not do it. To distress is to weaken, and weakening the children weakens the whole family”.   

By seeking to keep America dependent on the United Kingdom for fully manufactured goods, the English parliament provoked a sleeping beast. In population, land mass and educational advancement, America was already accelerating far ahead of its mother country. Otherwise docile and willing subjects of the English crown began to doubt the long term good intentions of their sovereign king to their welfare. Thus were sown some of the seeds that eventually led American nationalists like Patrick Henry, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and Benjamin Franklin to fight for America’s independence in the Revolutionary War of 1775 – 1783.

What does this tale of wise mothers, weakened children and broken empires have on brand portfolio management you may ask? In my brief marketing career, I have been privy to many scenarios that highlight what can go right or wrong when a company has more than one brand in its stable. No company has unlimited funds to execute every plan it has to drive its marketing program.  By implication, prioritization of one brand over the other must occur. Which brand should have a TV commercial shot for it? Which brands should be used for the large sponsorship inventory purchased on the digital TV platform? Which brand should the sales team give priority during sales calls?

These are the questions marketing leaders grapple with under the watchful eyes of their marketing teams. Egos are on the line, career trajectories are at stake and annual bonuses are in play from the decisions made on what to do with the available resources. 

In an ideal situation, a professional would consult the Boston Consulting Group Matrix (define which is a Star, The Dog, The Question Mark and the Cash Cow amongst the brands and allocate resources accordingly).  Alternatively they could use the Arcus Portfolio performance matrix, defining their Focus brand, Divestiture brand, Alignment brand or Investment brand and allocate resources accordingly; or utilize any other structured way of making these decisions.



Sadly this doesn't always happen. Organizations are run by people, and despite their best intentions and professional exposure; it is often the case that decisions are made on a whim, to manage egos or to reward ‘loyalty’ – not always in the best interest of the company.

These actions, birthed and conceived in irrational cocoons, are eventually defended by quasi-rational justifications.

“We don't want brand X to outshine brand Y because Y is the current focus of the company”
“You know brand X has always delivered 80% growth, so it can sit this quarter out.  Let's put all resources to ensure brand Y performs well”.

Don't get me wrong, many of these justifications may have substance but it's the follow-on actions that make their implementation ultimately detrimental to business performance. I believe decisions concerning portfolio management should be openly discussed and a clear framework for allocating resources based on a disciplined approach be adopted by marketing-focused organizations. Decisions should be made in the open and the opportunity for robust representation be made at all levels. 

Ideally, every brand in a portfolio should be focused on a differentiated segment of its own - with a clear target audience, distinct route to market and unique product features - to make it stand out in a crowd. However, what we often see is that brands slowly begin to overlap as the struggle to make a struggling brand a winner, leads to a cut-and-paste approach. A route to market appropriate mainly for brand X is hijacked for brand Y just to "see if it will work". Slowly the marketing organization begins to cannibalize itself for growth.

Weakening one child (brand) in other to make another child strong is a recipe for civil war in the marketing organization. A wise mother (marketing director/GM Marketing) focuses quite intently on discovering all the things that make each child unique and ensures none is starved for the other. Those requiring immediate focus should be fully supported while those on the bench need to be allowed to flourish while they wait their turn in the sun. This is the secret to retaining an empire (multi-brand market dominance). I believe this is possible: A situation where every brand in a portfolio is in a market dominant position within its own competitive ecosystem.



Here is a special hat tip to my friend whose struggles at work inspired this article. Hang in there bro, whatever refuses to bend will break free….just ask America.                               


Monday, March 24, 2014

Social Media Marketing: Pros and Cons



Precious lives saved, corrupt policemen exposed and corporate malfeasance unearthed. Lynching’s going viral, nationwide protesters united behind hashtags and new products discussed without the brand managers input.

So much for social media and it's ever widening reach in Nigeria. This has happened in tandem with the democratization of access to ever cheaper data plans on even the most mid range of mobile devices

For the marketer, this digital seismic shift has opened a pathway, nay a firm crevice into that most elusive part of the "target market": their proclivity to be influenced.

The old media forms were losing their hold, their time tested ability to sow our seeds of influence. The old media was on the ropes, grasping for air but mercifully new media is here to bail it out. With radio stations conducting visual interviews via “hangouts” and TV stations live streaming tweets as they happen…it is clear the times they are a changing.


EXPLORING THE PROs FOR MARKETERS

The ability to influence the thoughts and actions of large groups is the "Pro" we would pay a kings ransom to preserve as marketers. For most marketers, the A.I.D.A framework for influencing behavior change remains a rallying schematic.

Awareness, Interest, Desire and Action lend themselves to the social media landscape in a fast changing digital world. Recruiting influencers on social media has become a key task that is only tempered by matching the right influencer to the campaign at hand. Choosing the right influencers on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram greatly fast tracks the success of awareness creation, interest development and stimulation of desire to purchase our brands and patronize our services.

For those with a limited vision on how far ranging social media can be deployed, they tend to use it only for the first 3 legs of the A.I.D.A framework. 

Taking action via Social media (usually purchase decisions) has been slow to catch on but there are many “outliers” in the Nigerian sphere. A strong commendation must go to a brand like GTBank that has created an application that allows users set up a bank account and transact business from within the Facebook environment.



We now have the robustness of “brick and mortar” businesses like Vitafoam that not only allow you select mattress types on their website but also pay for it online. To boot you can also verify “authenticity” of a purchased mattress via an SMS platform. 



This trend cannot be ignored as “Action” is what most marketers get rewarded for. Revenues are assured when the tools you deploy for marketing result in customers who take action. Getting marketing budgets approved for social media campaigns are another trend characterizing much of budget defenses.

Only few marketing directors give Social Media budgets the true focus they deserve. For those who are bullish on it, the rewards have been massive. You gain first mover advantage within your industry if you know what you’re doing.  

THE “CONs” REAR THEIR HEAD

In the old days, (pre-social media) there were very few opportunities for individuals to engage brands and get their attention. It was a “broadcast” relationship of one-to-many (brands speaking to audiences). 

Social media has disrupted this balance of power. The world we now live in is one of many-to-many relationships; with individuals being able to put a brand on the spot for any service failures in the open “village square” which social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook have become.

The very nature of a village square in pre colonial times was one in which an aggrieved person would table an issue in the presence of other villagers to get their input in holding an offender responsible. Needless to say this was quite an effective means as offenders behaved themselves to avoid public censure 



Social media has become a platform for not only customer complaints resolution by brands but also a village square sometimes overrun by bellicose digital citizens. A few brands have been at the receiving end of a barrage of “hostile customers” who can latch on to hashtags, hijack social media campaigns and engage smear campaigns. Such public scuffles’ can get really messy and may leave your brand in tatters.

Skilled marketers need to be ready to face this clear and present dynamic in their use of social media for marketing purposes. Authenticity and the willingness to admit wrong will go a long way in building a hedge for your brand in online waters that can be really murky.


IN CONCLUSION                                                                  
I believe the “pros” far outweigh the “cons” when it comes to social media marketing. The social media space has opened brands up to consumers who can respond and interact more meaningfully to our brands and services. 


I would sign up for that any day.

Saturday, February 22, 2014

How I Chose a Career in Marketing




I believe one of the most defining decisions a young person makes in their 20's is the choice of a career. Many are sadly hampered by many distractions and thus spend that time merely choosing between jobs.
Several other writers have done a better job splitting the hairs on the difference between a job and a career.

For me and quite simply, a career is a series of jobs, experiences and projects that reflect a coherent theme and are usually aligned to a specific industry.

This post is to help shine a light for many young professionals just starting out in the world of work. Hopefully my story can serve as lighthouse as you make the right choices along the way.

While in the University of Ibadan, I decided I wanted to be a consultant. Don't ask why consulting...it just happened to become a dominant theme in my thoughts at the time. So i researched the leading consulting firms....Phillips Consulting, Accenture, Price Water House, Akintola Deloitte etc




I found out that most of them required at least a minimum grade of Second Class Upper to get you in the door. To be honest my first year in school was spent shooting the breeze..i was just taking life easy and didn’t realize the heavy lifting required to be an outstanding student. When my grades came in they were mediocre to say the least.

I thus began the valiant effort to redeem myself from my 2nd year. By final year, I was a straight A's student in Psychology, earning a nick name and an award as Class Professor for leading discussion groups, managing research projects and all what not.

Alas I missed a 2nd Class upper grade by .5 .The CGPA system allowed my 1st years mediocrity to limit the redemptive work of 3 more productive years. Oops...down went my consulting dreams or so i thought. This was 2002

I spent my 1 year of National service as a children's missionary in Benue state Nigeria after graduation. It was hard work. i was teaching little children bible stories and traveling different towns in the state to help churches and ministries.

Language barriers aside, teaching children anything is a job reserved for saints. I shouldered on to the end. Just before I finished my service year though, my fiancee (now wife) told me about a great speaker and consultant Fela Durotoye who had come to speak in UI.

I went on the internet to research about him and his company and stumbled on an interview that just blew me away. I determined to cut my consulting teeth at his firm. I got his phone number and requested a meeting. He obliged

After some chit chat, he asked pointedly why I had asked to see him. I told him I wanted to learn consulting at his firm. He declined. He wasn't looking to hire anyone more as he believed in a small firm of competent hands and his team was complete at the moment.

He saw my dejection and asked me to tell him what exactly i was doing in Benue state. Feeling all hopes were lost in getting a job at VIP Consulting, I simply went on to tell him about all my adventures teaching kids, organizing meetings and starting bible clubs across the state and north central zone of Nigeria.

Unknown to me, my account left a lasting impression on him and he asked me to give him a call when I returned after the service year. I returned February 2004 and immediately called him. He offered me a job on the phone and I started work the Friday after i returned from Benue.

I would need a separate post to tell all I learnt at VIP Consulting - how to facilitate strategy sessions, present to a management team, craft a consulting project and execute it, how to bill for consultant projects etc. My first project was a telephone culture assessment project for a mid level bank. After 10 months at VIP though, I was feeling restless.

We were consultants on customer service excellence projects with an industry focus on the banking industry. We did great work but I knew this wasn't my sweet spot. The subject matter didn’t get my mind blazing. I decided to resign and seek for what I lacked through some time introspecting.

Fela wasnt pleased, none of my colleagues were but I insisted and they wished me well. For 6 months I was job hunting and trying to understand what exactly my field should be. I guess I left thinking an “aha moment” would hit quite quickly and a job would follow immediately. I was wrong. Thus begun a long period of soul searching and kicking myself in the foot for resigning a good job.

Eventually i resolved that I was a communicator at heart. Explaining and selling ideas and products got my blood racing. One of my best courses in university was consumer psychology and this was one of the insights that led me to settle on the marketing communications industry. I started applying to advertising agencies, fast and furiously.

From a 2 month contract job as a training consultant on the Lagos Lottery Project, I eventually got a job as Public Relations executive at DDB Lagos a leading advertising company. I was like a fish in water! Crafting key messages, writing press releases and interfacing with clients, journalists etc was like the best thing ever. My first boss Akonte Ekine remains one of the finest minds in PR practice in Nigeria and he taught me everything he could for as long as I could seat still.

Little did i know then that another change was near. DDB had been invited to pitch for the MTN Nigeria advertising business and the Strategic Planning manager of the agency invited me to join the pitch team. This was pure bliss, my consulting skills and my newly appreciated love for communication found harmony in that pitch process.

To cut the story short, DDB won the pitch and i moved from the PR team to the Strategic Planning unit. My new boss Bayo Adekanmbi took me under his wing and showed me that communications was only a small part of marketing and I must prepare to expand my capacity.

In this new role I was using studies of an industry, insight about a product and analysis of the motivations of consumers to brief the creative teams to come up with winning communication campaigns. In this hot matrix I discovered my career.



From that point on till now, I have been expanding my capacity in the marketing industry. Going on courses, enrolling for CIM programs and taking on jobs and projects that have made me more and more of a marketing professional.

At my core i remain a consultant in orientation, my degree in Psychology has guided my lifelong curiosity about consumers motivations and my choice of marketing as a career has led me on a path of professional fulfillment.

Choosing a career is a tricky business and must be done not only with an eye on how much money you can make on that path but also how engaging the chosen path is of your unique talents, your interests and motivation.

Finding and listening to mentors to help guide your decisions is also very important. I thank God for the quality of leaders/managers I have had all through my career.

I learned early in my career not to make decisions based on just salary but on the path which, if taken would make me a better marketing professional. So far its been profitable.

Its been 10 years now since my first job, i can only hope that the next 10 will be even more exciting.

Have a great weekend.


Monday, January 20, 2014

Brands To Make You Dance




In the year 1434, Cosimo De Medici (or Cosimo the Elder) used his rise to power as occasion to lead the Medici family on a path that immortalized their family name as patrons of the arts and humanities. The Medici family used their power and money to commission and publicize the works of artists in Florence and indeed helped galvanize the Renaissance movement across Europe.




They would commission artists for years (practically put them on retainer), pay for their supplies and buy the works of art they churned out. They even paid for periods of study for artistes to learn and perfect their craft. Michelangelo, Leonardo Da Vinci and Boticelli were all artists they cultivated and supported; Galileo was on paid retainer to tutor the Medici children.

Any wonder why eccentric rapper Kanye West, while on a radio interview name dropped the Medici family in a rant on his frustration with Nike (athletics brand powerhouse) for not pulling all stops to push his Nike Air Yeezy sneaker collaboration project. 



Said Kanye, "I am standing up and I'm telling you I am Warhol. I am the number one most impactful artist of our generation. I am Shakespeare in the flesh, Walt Disney. And who's going to be the Medici family and stand up and let me create more? Or do you want to marginalize me till I'm out of my moment?."

Mad rant aside, Kanye West was highlighting the role that modern day brands can play in furtherance of the arts, music and our lifestyle culture trend. He juxtaposed modern brands as the current potential incarnation of the Medici patronage. Brands can promote musicians via ambassadorships (Alicia Keys & BlackBerry), collaborations on specific products/projects (Kanye and Nike) & outright partnerships (P Diddy and Ciroc)

Gold Rush

The Nigerian marketing space has seen an explosion of involvement of brands with music artistes. At a point in the year of our Lord 2013, if you were a music star and were not signed as a brand ambassador to a major brand, your star was perceived not to be shining.

From telecoms companies to online retailers, mobile phone manufacturers and even insecticide brands, signing a music artiste was the new cool marketing trick.  As with all things “faddish”, there have been different outcomes to signing of brand ambassadors.

With certain musicians also being ambassadors to multiple brands albeit in different industries, you begin to wonder who is in the driving seat. The brand or the artiste? There is a point you can get to as an artiste that your brand value is so extended across too many products and platforms that diminishing returns sets in for your multiple “Medicis”.

When musicians “take sides”, (by accepting to be brand ambassadors) it has an effect on their ability to perform at certain concerts/events sponsored by competing brands, their social media engagements change ideally their earning power should increase as well.



The jury is out on the last point but I suspect for some of these artistes their total earnings will increase only marginally though they get lump sums payments which help them with milestone expenditures. I will briefly review some brand moves in 2 industries that played big in music in 2013 (Telecoms and Breweries) before I close in on an outlook for 2014.

Industry Review

As a player in the telecoms industry, my opinions may seem biased but I have to give it some of the brands who have shown proper finesse in their marketing spend. My yellow cousins (you know who) signed up some very good musicians and have been pretty ruthless in milking the music they create for profits especially through charged Ring Back Tunes (RBT) at N50 monthly rental per tune.






The marketing support for this RBT drive has been heavy and covers radio campaigns, billboards, SMS campaigns, TV adverts, Event specific drive etc. its been a great year to be a music creator working with this particular network. This brand has gone into this ambassadorship not to promote their brand as such but to create a stronger revenue stream as voice revenue begins to decline.

So if you were lucky enough to sign-on real hit makers, your investment is good to take to the bank especially when you have 50m+ subscriber base. This is where the rubber hits the road though. Another player (with a darker green shade) has also signed many other artistes but their deployment has been geared towards creating brand association and imagery via advertising.

Without a doubt, this is a legitimate marketing tactic but also one fraught with some challenges. Key of which is to answer “what does the brand stand for?”. When a brand signs more than 8 musical acts and uses all of them for advertising you begin to wonder what the key message the brand wants the audience to pick from the resulting brand association.

Each artiste stands for something and appeals to a demographic so when you deploy them all “willy nilly” the question that begs to be answered is “what central message do all these acts help you sell?”. Even more worrisome is how you deploy music acts in ways that are not consistent to what they are known for. I literally cringed watching a great rapper cameo as a football player in an ad when the whole world knows him to be a basket ball player!

Cringe worthy I tell ya. I’m a message purist and I believe you deploy your marketing resources where they are believable and reinforce themselves. They have some work to do here. Their execution of a TV commercial with the Hip Hop twins that used their very popular single with a known dance step was very well done and should be the minimum standard they deploy in my opinion.

Not being privy to their marketing war room meetings I would give them the benefit of the doubt and conclude they know what they are doing for the long term.

The breweries companies were not left out in their patronage of the arts but from a slightly less committed stand point. None of the big players signed any music acts to be definitive brand ambassadors in the year under review (2013) but some big moves stood out for me.

Earlier in the year, Nigerian Breweries, parent company of the Star brand unveiled the Star Music App. Ostensibly it was to be the digital platform to position Star as a brand that had music as a strategic lever in its engagement of its defined target market.

The app would be the destination of choice for the target audience to learn about breaking news from local and international music stars and get to watch the latest music videos first from artistes they love, all exclusively on the app.

The launch was followed by a major blitz on online platforms, banner ads, Yahoo page take overs and even Outdoor billboards. I just had to take notice of these guys marketing footprint

I quickly downloaded the app (it's available for Android, iOS and Blackberry) and found it quite rich in the promised content. In due course, Wizkid dropped the video for "Azonto" exclusively on the Star Music app followed quickly by Olamide, one of the breakout revelations of 2013, who dropped the video to "Durosoke" first on the Star app.  



In keeping with their normal on ground engagements, Star Trek came through and had on display some of the reigning musical stars in Nigeria on display in a 7 city music concert too that earned rave reviews.

As is the tradition with many brewery companies, they tend to change the packaging of their brands bottle from time to time. Star recently announced and unveiled a new bottle termed the “Rock Star” bottle. Their decision to put a marked price premium on this bottle is however worrisome. It might be the only aspect of the beautiful campaign that requires some tweaks. Overall, the brand consistency with their “Music” theme 2013 must be applauded.

 The Guinness brand came a bit late to the music party with a brand unveil for their new bottle styled “The Colorful World of More” concert. Undeniably one of the best concerts in 2013 – audience reaction, stars on line up etc – but the total end to end marketing play in the music space seemed abrupt. They had the concert only in Lagos (a big market for sure) but is Guinness now a Lagos brand?. Is there no need to delight other drinkers across the nation? Knowing how marketing could be I trust they would have loved to do that but I’m not sure why they didn’t.

Don’t mind me….i love to see a follow through on a marketing theme. In their industry, I think Star took the crown in 2013.

Let the music play

In 2014, how should brands engage their audiences using music and musicians? Marketing is essentially a contest for minds, hearts and eventually wallets. This contest must however build up the utility of all tools it deploys…in essence, if music is to be used in this contest we must not reduce the quality of the music, nor diminish the craft of the musicians.






I fear that some musicians craft is being diminished by their association with brands. I won’t cite examples but it’s clear that when your focus shifts from delighting your audience (fans/general public) to driving brand messages, something in your craft is diminished. Never forget that brands only engaged you because they felt you were highly regarded by the public. If eventually this high regard starts to wane be rest assured that brand managers have no qualms in discontinuing such relationships. That’s a hard fact.

Musicians must focus their time and energy on the creation of music that delights their fan base. Honing the stage craft to hold a concert spell bound while remaining connected to the rippling undercurrent of consumer sentiment that makes one song a hit and another a disaster.

In essence, musicians must themselves act like brands. They must have a loyalty first to their consumers in all they do. It is in their healthy awareness of this need that their long term relevance to brands is sustained. Their associations must be with those brands that help them create more, extend their reach and become more original from day to day.

The brands will take care of themselves. Their sales figures keep many of their brand managers alive to their real constituency – the public and not their brand ambassadors. They will refine their association with musicians, dropping some, signing on more. I only hope that the deployment of music and musicians is more strategic, contributing more closely to the bottom line than ever before.

If music be the food of sales, play on.