It’s a great time to be a consumer. There are countless stories of entrepreneurs engineering highly useful products and services to disrupt tired, established categories.
Yet that is seemingly not the commercial theory subscribed to by many of the 10x companies of the world. They are of the view that if you can build something truly useful, consumers will come.
When a promising start-up launches a new product, it usually has a number of unique and distinguishing features – superior quality or functionality or delivery. All wrapped up in beautifully designed branding and packaging, whispering sweet nothings to millennial aesthetic sensibilities.
And while they may generate initial attraction, what’s to stop a competitor launching a product with the same superior quality and design at a lower price? What’s to stop the disrupters becoming the disrupted? (Spoiler alert: the brand).
A brand is not a collection of product features. A brand has implicit meaning to the person who buys it, acting as a symbol by which they can express their personality, their beliefs, their interests, their style. If brands are only ever a collection of features, how do we navigate them?
“Think about what and how you buy in your business and personal life. Whether it’s household products or enterprise data services, what ultimately determines why you buy from one company rather than another? It’s the brands’ images and reputations and the relationship you have with them…If you want great business results, you and your brand have to stand for something compelling” - Jim Stengel, Grow
What gives a brand meaning is its purpose. If the answer to the question 'what business are we in?' does not extend beyond the category, that’s a problem. Because ultimately, people love (and subsequently choose) brands which enable them to be part of something bigger than themselves.
“It’s not what people buy, it’s what they buy into”
— Millward Brown, Brand Z study
Even more recently, Pinterest and Uber have arrived. While the success of these giants is undeniable, what impact might it have made to the long term success of these brands, if purpose had outwardly underpinned the business from the start? Do we really love these brands beyond their utility?
This article originally appeared in thechallengerproject.com
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