Banks: Who do Consumers Trust?

March 22, 2010

“Consumers trust other consumers more than they trust brands.”

I come across this statement a lot.  Mostly in blogs and books/articles about social media.  The authors usually back this statement with results from one survey or another.

As if that settles anything.  Ask people who they trust more—other consumers or brands—and the majority will choose other consumers.

Most people won’t accept that they’re influenced by brands and brand marketing.  They see themselves—and want others to see them as—more savvy than that.

But that doesn’t mean they aren’t influenced by brands.  Decades of studies demonstrate that they are, but—the majority of the time—they’re not aware of being influenced.  The effects of influence take place mostly in the unconscious, and we have no way of accessing the unconscious.

In fact, the real question isn’t whether brand matters, but whether trust matters.  There is reason to believe that trust may be overrated as a decision factor.  Here’s an example:

Trust in big banks is almost non-existent these days, yet a number of big banks recently had an incredible year.  “I don’t trust big banks,” doesn’t seem to be translating into, “I won’t use big banks.”

A brand simply can’t be reduced to a concept like trust—it’s much more complex than that.

The whole brand, in all of its complexity, is something our rational minds may never understand, but always underestimate.

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Bank Branding Webinar

March 15, 2010

I’d like to invite you to my upcoming webinar, “The 7 Laws that Govern Your Brand.”

Per the title, I’ll be discussing seven principles that underlie strong brands, and a new branding model derived from them.  It’s a quick 30 minutes, free, and geared toward bank marketers.  Here’s the lowdown:

The 7 Laws that Govern Your Brand
Wednesday, March 24th at 2:30 pm EST

To register, contact Marci Grzelecki:
248-643-6431 ext 221 or mgrzelecki@michaelflora.com

Hope you can make it.

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Bank Haters

March 15, 2010

I haven’t posted in awhile, and I apologize for that.  Other bloggers with hectic schedules seem to be able to post regularly.  I don’t know why I’m having such a hard time with it.

Anyway, I was preparing for a webinar a couple of weeks ago, and I Googled the phrase, “I hate banks.”

Google returned over 54 million responses.

We’re not talking about frustration, anger, or even disgust here.  We’re talking hatred, and lots of it.  Even if three quarters of those responses aren’t relevant, you still have about 14 million left.

Have you thought about how all this generalized hatred is affecting your brand?

Is it only about the too-big-to-fail boys?  Or is it, “a high tide raises all ships,” in reverse?

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Banks Can Be Heroes

January 28, 2010

“A hero is someone who has given his or her life to something bigger than oneself.”  — Joseph Campbell

I mentioned the hero’s journey in my last post, without any explanation or context.  I’ll remedy that here.

The context is mythology.  Specifically, brand mythology.

Bank marketers typically keep their distance from this end of the branding spectrum, because mythology seems too ethereal.  It’s anything but.  Many of the most successful brands in the world are built on carefully cultivated mythologies.  Harley Davidson (outsider), Apple (creator), and Campbell’s Soup (mother) come to mind.

Joseph Campbell, quoted above and no relation to Campbell’s Soup, was a scholar who spent his life identifying common structures in mythologies from around the world. Primary among these structures is the monomyth, also known as the hero’s journey.

Here’s the basic monomyth structure:

  1. Ordinary World – Business as usual
  2. Call to Adventure – Something upsets business as usual
  3. Refusal of the Call – Hero is reluctant to leave what he knows
  4. Deciding Factor – Someone or something cause him to reconsider
  5. Crossing the Threshold – The hero begins his journey/adventure
  6. The Road of Trials – The hero perseveres through a series of challenges
  7. The Supreme Ordeal – The hero meets the ultimate challenge, overcomes it, and captures the object of his quest
  8. The Escape -  The hero endures more trials before re-entering the world of business-as-usual
  9. Return with Elixir – He returns with what he has learned or won for the benefit of his fellows

If this sounds familiar, it should.  The monomyth is the basis for a significant percentage of Hollywood movies—Star Wars, The Wizard of Oz, The Lion King, The Matrix, Gladiator, Groundhog Day, Casablanca, Titanic, Ben Hur, and When Harry Met Sally, to name a few.  A current example is Crazy Heart, the Jeff Bridges vehicle.

Here’s how it plays out in the current Domino’s campaign:

  1. Ordinary World – Domino’s as it has been for, let’s say, the past decade
  2. Call to Adventure – Complaints about product quality in focus groups
  3. Refusal of the Call – Domino’s continues to focus on reliable delivery and affordability
  4. Deciding Factor – YouTube video depicting employees doing disgusting things to Domino’s food puts the company’s reputation at risk
  5. Crossing the Threshold – Domino’s decides to redirect consumer attention from cleanliness to taste
  6. The Road of Trials – Company engages in trial and error process to improve the taste of Domino’s pizza until the new, improved pizza is finalized
  7. The Supreme Ordeal – Domino’s needs to let the past go, and face the public with new pizza—it does so with a risky, new advertising campaign admitting to quality problems and showing the company dealing with this reality
  8. The Escape -  The company endures criticism from pundits for abandoning existing fans.
  9. Return with Elixir – Formerly critical consumers loves the new pizza

Any bank could employ the monomyth structure that Domino’s used so adroitly.  Which is not to say that a bank would need to expose its shortcomings.  A bank could tell the story of fulfilling a mission, overcoming a challenge, or self-transformation. The main point is to dramatize a change process—a heroic journey—that benefits the customer.

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Banks, Brands, Promises, and Pizza

January 26, 2010

In recent years, the definition of a brand as a promise has dominated all others.  I can understand why.  It’s easy to understand, it sounds manageable, and it terminates any further need for exploration.

In other words, it’s convenient.  Which is a long way from saying it works.

Bank of America, for example, can make all the promises they like, but few people are going to believe them.  You might say it’s because they’re not delivering on their promises.  Fair enough.  But is that all there is to it?

I believe it’s because their brand carries meaning that overrides their promises.

One obvious current meaning is that, to much of the general public, the BofA brand represents unbridled greed.  The myth goes something like this:  “They caused the recession.  Regardless, we bailed them out.  Then they put the money in their own pockets instead of using it to help the economy.”

It doesn’t matter if the myth is true or not.  It constricts the power of any promise BofA can make.  This is a big, big problem, and it’s going to require a lot more than “reputation management.”  It’s going to require the creation of a whole new brand meaning—a whole new mythology.

Not quite as convenient as making promises, is it?

To demonstrate the kind of work that needs to be done, let’s look outside the banking industry at the new Domino’s Pizza campaign.  Over the years, the Domino’s brand had come to represent poor quality, and—by extension—doing the bare minimum, and simply not caring.  Here’s what Domino’s did about it:

The campaign shows that Domino’s is not only willing to face reality, but to be transparent about it.  Not only willing to rise to the challenge, but to be excited about it.  Finally—and this is the genius part—to be openly proud of what they’ve accomplished.

Talk about a change in meaning—this is a near-perfect execution of the hero’s myth:

This new meaning is what makes the product improvements—the promise—credible.  Without meaning, the promise would just be another “new and improved’ claim.  With it, the promise has real power.

And the moral of the story?  Don’t let convenience limit your brand.  Meaning is where the action is.

I’ll have more to say on brand meaning in a future post.

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Banks, Focus Your Brands

January 19, 2010

The public outrage over bank bonuses has returned with a vengeance.  Right or wrong, it’s a threat to your bank’s brand.

The only question is, what are you going to do about it?

The public is in no mood to be educated about variable compensation.  And, as far as consumers are concerned, banks are all guilty by association.  Battening down the hatches and hoping to ride it out isn’t going to help either.

Here are three strategies you can use to protect—and even improve—your brand:

  • Be Perfect
    Customer experience is a major contributor to your brand.  Make sure all customer touchpoints—frontline, website, call centers, etc.—are functioning at their absolute best.  Start by assuming they’re not, then look for shortcomings and fix them.
  • Mirror Your Customers
    Talk their talk.  Share their values, aspirations, and concerns.  Turn up the empathy.  If they see themselves in you—if your story is their story—you’ve got brand.  People are drawn to doing business with people like themselves.  So be like them.
  • Get Real Local
    Amp up your community participation.  Think micro as well as macro.  Gestures like sponsoring a little league team (and showing up for games) are powerful bonding agents.  Seize every opportunity and seek out more. Actions, not words, are key.

Obviously, the object here is to focus on empirical evidence that your bank is different.

The more local you get, the less national issues will reflect on your brand.  The more that customers identify with you, the less likely they’ll be to lump you in with other banks.  And the easier you are to work with, the more they’ll be inspired to spread the word.

The amazing thing is,  as you put these three strategies into practice, you’ll realize—along with your customers—that you actually are different.

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Banks: Beware of Brand Lock-In

January 18, 2010

I’ve been reading You are Not a Gadget by Jaron Lanier, and it really has my synapses firing.

Lanier is famous in tech circles for being the father of virtual reality.  His knowledge of all things digital is ocean-deep and equally broad, so it behooves us to pay attention to what he has to say.

What I want to focus on in this post is Lanier’s  take on the process of lock-in.

Digital designs get frozen into place when, “many software programs are designed to work with an existing one.”  When too many programs are dependent on the original, it becomes virtually impossible to change.  That’s lock-in.

“Because computers are growing more powerful at an exponential rate,” cautions Lanier,” the designers and programmers of technology must be extremely careful when they make design decisions.”

“The process is of lock-in is like a wave gradually washing over the rulebook of life, culling the ambiguities of flexible thoughts as more and more thought structures are solidified into effectively permanent reality.”

In other words, “Lock-in turns thoughts into facts.”  They become, “Defining, unchangeable rules of our lives.”

Lanier’s admonition is one that brand managers should take to heart.  I’ve seen a lot branding practices get locked in before the inherent limitations are explored and implications are adequately understood.

The result is often a brand identity that’s already chafing before it’s buttoned up.  By then, the investment is so high that rethinking is no longer an option.

It’s human nature to want to get out of the uncomfortable thinking stage and into action—to turn the first decent thought into a Gantt Chart.

Exercise restraint.

Or before you know it, you’ll be locked in and living with the consequences.

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Banks: Whose World Do You Live In?

November 30, 2009

A recent post from Cashcow features two ad campaigns promising to make banking simpler.  It’s a worthy goal, but I tend to agree with Jeff Pilcher’s comment that—at least historically—such campaigns reflect bank-think rather than how customers think.

What stuck with me about the post, though, was the tagline for an Australian bank’s campaign:  “We live in your world.”

In the U.S. it’s become increasingly apparent that banks don’t live in our world.  They live in a world where any thought of truly serving their customers begins and ends in a 30-second spot.   A world where shareholders are kings and everyone else is a goldmine.  Where any deception is OK as long as it’s profitable.

Is this an unfair assessment?  It doesn’t matter because, if you’re a bank of any size, This is your brand in the world where your customers live.

It doesn’t matter what you think your brand is or what you want it to be.  You’re stuck with the brand your customers give you.  This is the crux of Outside-In Banking.:

  • You don’t own your brand.  They do.
  • You don’t create your brand.  They do.
  • You don’t control your brand.  They do.

So, if you want your brand to change, you have to change.  And that doesn’t mean changing your tagline.  It means changing your world.

How’s that for making banking simple?

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Is Advertising really dead? Really? Part III

October 21, 2009

Warning: This post is long (and probably long-winded).  If you belong the statistical majority who don’t read on the web, here’s the conclusion—advertising is neither dead nor dying.  If you want to know why, read on.

In this—the final post of a series—I’m going to wrap things up.  Here’s the argument I’ve been attempting to refute:

  • Premise: Consumers don’t believe advertising anymore.
  • Inference: Consumers are in control now.
  • Conclusion: Advertising is dead.

So far, I’ve submitted that:

  • Belief is not a necessary condition for advertising effectiveness, and therefore the premise is irrelevant.
  • Consumers have always been able to vote with their feet. While they do have more voice today, and while they may feel empowered by this, they don’t have any more real control than they’ve always had.

Here are a few thought I’ve had since posting parts I and II:

Premise:

  • Consumers haven’t believed or trusted advertising for decades—a fact that hasn’t prevented it from working for decades.
  • Belief and trust are primarily evidence-based—if the sun has risen every day, you believe and trust that it will rise tomorrow—but decisions, as neuroscience has revealed, are primarily emotion-based.

Inference:

  • If consumers were in control, we’d see more evidence—better service, less overcharging, an increase in consumer-friendly policies, etc.
  • It’s not clear that most consumers want control (and the attendant responsibility), so even if they were given the way, would they have the will?

Before moving on to the conclusion, I want to consider some other common arguments for the advertising is dead theory.

  1. Consumer media habits have changed.
    Advertising has not changed.
    Advertising is dead.
  2. Businesses require accountability today.
    Advertising isn’t accountable.
    Advertising is dead.
  3. People hate advertising.
    People are tuning advertising out.
    Advertising is dead.

Advertising and Media Habits

Media habits are indeed changing, but advertising is changing, too.

In fact, from its inception, advertising has been in continuous evolution.

  • Over the years, it has adapted to radio, TV, cable, online, mobile, and thousands of so-called alternative media—gas station pumps, eggs, graffiti , t-shirts, stairways, interactive billboards, and the human body, to name a few.
  • It has taken on price/product, problem/solution, image, lifestyle, and behavior as messaging platforms.
  • Its focus has evolved through local, national, international, targeted, segmented, behavioral, and personal.

So media habits have changed.  They’ve changed before; they’ll change again.  As the Ad Contrarian so eloquently put it:

“Advertising doesn’t really care what media live and what media die. It will use what’s available.”

Related to changing media habits is the fracturing or splintering of media. With more choices available to consumers, no one medium gets the audience that TV, Newspapers, or Magazines once commanded.

Advertising is changing in this regard, too. It’s become, more targeted, less wasteful, and better at integrating various media. Fracturing might be a network or newspaper killer, but it’s certainly not an advertising killer.

Advertising and Accountability

Are businesses really demanding advertising accountability?

I’ve been hearing this cry for more accountability since the commercializing of the web, yet less than 20% of marketers currently measure ROI with any consistently or strategic planning.

I’d say, for most marketers, accountability falls in the “someday” column.  According to McKinsey, most companies still base their advertising budgets on the previous year’s  budget.  This jibes with my own experience.  Every year, come September, marketing managers increase their spending so that their budgets won’t be cut the following year.  This was true 20 years ago and it’s true today.

Of course, every company should demand accountability—it’s important to be efficient as well as effective.  That’s just good budget stewardship.  Unfortunately, it’s not the reality.

The reality is that accountability does not equal—nor does it necessarily lead to—profitability, which is something shareholders demand.  I’ve been doing this for nearly 30 years, and I’ve never met a CEO who obsessed over advertising ROI (although very single one obsessed over perception).

When it comes to accountability, I’m afraid there’s a lot more heat than light out there.

But is advertising accountable?

Yes and no.

What’s the ROI on a CFO? A new corporate headquarters? A mission statement? Casual Fridays? Public relations? Diversity? Training?

All of these have can have a positive effect on a business, and you can often correlate them with a rise in productivity, revenue, or profit.  But can you calculate a precise ROI?

I submit that advertising is more accountable than any of these.

There’s a spectrum, of course. Direct mail is highly accountable. Ads including special phone numbers or URLs are accountable, too.  As are retail sale ads, coupon ads, and search advertising.

Good-will advertising, not so much.

Most criticism, however, is directed at what is known as awareness advertising.

First off, the term is a misnomer. Very little advertising is devoted to awareness only.  What critics actually rail about should be called something like meaning advertising.  Because that’s what it does—it puts meaning into the products and services being advertised.  Most people spend most of their money on meaning. It is with this meaning that they construct their identities. Like it or not, the things we buy tell us—and others—who we are. The difference between Nike and New Balance is meaning. The difference between Black & Decker and Craftsman is meaning.  Shopping carts in a checkout line are baskets loaded with meaning.

The reason you follow through on the recommendations of people you know is not that you trust them, but that you share meanings with them.

So what about the ROI of meaning, then?  Does it matter?  I don’t think it matters to Muhtar Kent.  He’s just glad Coke has meaning.  And he’ll do everything in his power to keep it, because that meaning is worth nearly $68 billion to Coca-Cola—two thirds of its market cap.  And that’s the accountability Mr. Kent cares most about.

Unlike advertising accountability, meaning generates profit.

So, while much of advertising is accountable in the traditional sense, current methods simply aren’t up to the task of measuring meaning.

On the other hand, using a marketing tactic because you can measure it is like looking for your lost keys where the best light is, regardless of where you lost them.

Advertising and Tuning Out

“People read what interests them. Sometimes it’s an ad.”
Howard Luck Gossage

This is, and always has been, the case.  Nobody likes advertising, except when they do.

Think small. Where’s the beef? Just do it. Got milk? Think different. Mikey likes it.

Most people really don’t hate advertising.  They hate advertising that insults their intelligence, screams at them, bores them, tells unfunny or offensive jokes, wastes their time, or intentionally misleads them.  In other words, they hate bad advertising.

Good advertising, on the other hand provides value.  It’s likable, memetic, and game-changing,  Check out the movie Art & Copy if you get a chance, for an insight into how good advertising works.

Unfortunately, the bad usually outweighs the good.  Which is why most people say they hate advertising (most people also bristle at the suggestion that advertising influences them, but that’s another story).

According to Forrester, however, consumer attitudes toward advertising are actually improving.  Still negative, mind you, but improving.

A few statistics:

99% – Households in the US that own at least one television set

66% – US homes have three or more TV sets.

66% – US households that watch television during dinner

7 – Number hours the television is on per day in an average American  household

250 billion – Number of hours Americans watch television per year

72% – Adults who say that at least some of the ads they see on a typical day engage their attention

53% – Increase in those who say the commercials are the most important part of the Super Bowl (2005-2009)

50% – Internet users who report that TV captures their interest most effectively

51% – DVR users who say they always notice commercials while fast-forwarding

54% – DVR users who say they have rewound or paused television commercials to better understand the advertised product

I could go on and on.  Almost everyone uses statistics that support their claim, and ignore those that don’t.  Those who trumpet studies that “prove” DVR-enabled commercial skipping is approaching universality are no exception.

Try watching TV for an evening, poised to fast-forward through every single commercial break.  I’ve done it, and I didn’t find it liberating.  It was exhausting.

So…do people hate advertising?  Some of them, some of the time.  Are people tuning advertising out?  Some of them, some of the time.  None of this is new.  And, examined closely, none of it indicates of the death of advertising.

Summary

  • Belief is not a necessary condition for advertising effectiveness, so it doesn’t matter whether consumers believe advertising or not.
  • While consumers do have more voice today (and may feel empowered by this), they don’t have any more control than they’ve always had.
  • Media habits have changed, but it’s not the first time and it won’t be the last.
  • Advertising has changed as well.  In fact, it has been constantly evolving along with culture and technology, and it will continue to do so.
  • When it comes to businesses demanding accountability from advertising, there’s a lot more talk than action.
  • Much of advertising really is accountable in the traditional sense. The primary benefits of other advertising are intangible, but irreplaceable.
  • Some people hate advertising some of the time.  Some people tune out advertising some of the time. Same as it ever was.

Conclusion

Advertising is neither dead nor dying.  As long as there are products and services to sell, there will be advertising in one form or another.

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Banks: A Video Lesson in Marketing

October 19, 2009

Roy Sutherland, Vice Chairman of Ogilvy Group UK, gave a talk at TED recently.  According to his TED bio, Sutherland “stands at the center of an advertising revolution in brand identities, designing cutting-edge, interactive campaigns that blur the line between ad and entertainment.”  He’s also a funny guy and very knowledgeable.  I this talk, he explains the advantages of the intangible over the tangible.  Well worth watching:

Quotable quote: “All value is perceived value.”

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