Friday, August 21, 2009

Quote of the Friday.


(http://media.photobucket.com/)
"YOUR CLIENTS ARE IN TROUBLE. THEY ARE LOOKING TO YOU TO SAVE THEM. THE AD INVENTORY THAT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR THE LAST 50 YEARS NO LONGER WORKS, AND MARKETERS HAVE STARTED TO FIGURE THAT OUT. IN THE PROCESS, YOUR CLIENTS WILL FIRE, HIRE, FIRE, AND HIRE AGENCY AFTER AGENCY ... SEEKING SOMEONE, ANYONE! -- WHO CAN HELP THEM PERHAPS ON WHERE TO GO NEXT."
- John Stratton, CMO Verizon Wireless (pulled from Anomaly's website)

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Realism vs. Aspirationalism

Let's talk about consumers for a second. There's what they say they want to hear in messaging and in pictures/photos that will make them buy and then there's what will actually make them buy. Talking to consumers through my job has made me more aware than ever of the divide between realism vs. aspirationalism (I'm making that word up and coining it for my own thank ya very much!).
It's what Dove tapped into. They probably heard enough consumers say, I want to see real people so they advertised with real people. It made people feel good about the brand but I've heard beauty clients before say they are skeptical that it actually sold more Dove. People felt motivated to be more confident in their own skin but not motivated to dish out the dollars to Dove products necessarily.
It happens in other categories too across the board. People are desperate for transparency and realism but the question is, how attractive is that really? Often times, the hard, ugly reality of things is well... just that. And even though it's easier to relate to, we as, people are a society of progress and we enjoy envisioning ourselves with better skin, straighter smiles, whiter teeth, fitter bodies, better lives, etc. because truthfully, even if we can't relate to it, we want it. We all aspire.
So while you might hear your consumers saying, we want to see it real, we aren't perfect so give it to us like it is, be transparent and be true. Don't always listen to them. While it might be okay in some circumstances (b/c there are always outliers) and maybe more true in beauty, health, sports, wellness, apparel, and home categories, mirroring who and what they already are gives them nothing to aspire to and leaves your brand a bit in the dust. They may get warm-fuzzies from your brand but they may not feel like they are given the opportunity to better themselves and thus buy from you.
Mascara and fashion sells completely based on aspiration. Especially true for mascara, you know that you won't get eyelashes that look like that photo, but if you could even have eyelashes that look 1/10 as good, you'd be happy. That may be an extreme and is probably true b/c it is so appearance/image driven which doesn't hold as true or as much weight in other categories. So, I will also admit that there must be a nice middle ground somewhere out there that hybrids real and aspirational- a small bump up from reality without a total seismic shift.