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HUMAN NETWORK: 4 Ways Businesses Blunder and Make a Mess of Their Brands
On a November day in 2008, three automotive-industry CEOs flew from Detroit to Washington, D.C., on a mission they insisted was crucial to their companies’ survival.
They sought a federal bailout to help prop up their struggling businesses. But to the American public and some members of Congress, the CEOs’ lament that they were hard up for cash rang hollow because of their chosen mode of travel: luxurious private jets.
Their arrogant attitude left people with bad perceptions of the individual car brands, the overall Detroit brand and even the larger brand of cars made in America.
Such stumbles aren’t that unusual, and brands on occasion commit major missteps that risk putting them out of business. In fact, some people even claim brands go through a natural life cycle from birth to death, so the eventual demise of any given brand is inevitable. But he insists that’s not necessarily so.
Brands can live forever. The problem is that brands too often get into trouble due to self-inflicted actions of their owners.
There are probably a dozen identifiable ways businesses can make a mess of their brands. Here are 4:
1. The arrogance of great success.
Arrogance is bad for business and bad for brands.
Avoiding arrogance takes character and effort on the part of leaders. The leader who creates a culture of arrogance by letting success go to the head and ego is a leader who is more committed to self than to brand.
2. The comfort of complacency.
For brands and organizations, complacency lulls people into laziness and inaction, and crushes curiosity and creativity. Eventually, it leads to market-share loss. The danger is that you stop looking at the changes in the world around you and in your specific market segment.
Complacency creates inaction and, eventually, irrelevancy.
3. Building of organizational barriers and bureaucratic processes.
Bureaucracy and silos, where departments don’t share information with each other, can damage the brand’s health and the organization’s health.
Silos, for example, create all sorts of bad behaviors, such as hoarding, stopping the spread of ideas, and reinforcement of the status quo. When silos are combined with mind-numbing bureaucracy, a brand can stagnate.
4. Focusing on analyst satisfaction instead of customer satisfaction.
Too many companies focus on short-term gains and the stock value this quarter. They lose sight of long-term strategies and keeping customers happy over time.
A brand needs to satisfy stock analysts and investors 4 times a year, but they need to satisfy customers every day. Yes, corporate boards have a duty to shareholders. But those boards need to recognize that there is no shareholder value unless there is customer-driven brand value."
Even the biggest brands can fall into trouble, as we see all the time in the news. Sometimes it’s a fast free fall, and sometimes it takes decades. But it doesn’t have to be fatal. It’s possible to change the trajectory from waning to winning.
About the Author: Larry Light, a global brand revitalization expert, is co-author with Joan Kiddon of Six Rules for Brand Revitalization. He also is the CEO of Arcature, a marketing consulting company. Prior to consulting, Light worked on the advertising agency side as a senior executive at both BBDO and CEO of the International Division at Ted Bates Advertising. He was global Chief Marketing Officer of McDonald’s from 2002-2005, and from 2010 to 2014, he was Chief Brands Officer of the global hotels group IHG. For more information, please an email to Miguel Casellas-Gil at [email protected] or visit www.arcature.com.