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Iconoculture

Cornerstones, Diversions

Take This Job and Shove It!

The US is in a kind of tough place right now. Let’s see: unemployment is hovering around 10%, not only idling millions of workers but keeping millions more stuck in jobs they don’t like; it’s shaping up to be the hottest summer on record in many parts of the country; and, to top it all off, traffic is getting worse as local governments run out of money to invest in public transit and new roads. Add these (and many, many other) factors up, and it’s no secret why your average American is a little on edge these days.

So when JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater made a dramatic exit from his job on Tuesday, delivering an expletive-laced tirade to passengers over the intercom before grabbing a beer from the service cart and sliding down the plane’s emergency chute, it wasn’t surprising when he became something of a cause celebre. A Facebook fan group established after the news broke on Tuesday now has nearly 200,000 fans, and there’s talk of a legal defense fund (Slater was cited for public endangerment). Slater has been hounded by reporters and paparazzi since being released on bond, and his relatives have made the talk-show rounds. Read More »

Cutting Edge

Automotive Innovation around the World

Ah, the good old United States of America. Home of mom, baseball, apple pie, the Mustang and the Corvette. It stands to reason that the most auto-dense country in the world would be leading the charge of automotive innovation, and we covered some of the innovative products coming from domestic manufacturers here.

But that’s not stopping the rest of the world from employing their resources to make car ownership easier, cheaper and greener. Our friends at Iconoculture have rounded up some of the best examples of how car ownership is changing throughout the world. Read More »

MarketPulse

How Shoppable are Your Products?

Sometimes the cornucopia of plenty in American grocery and general merchandise stores can be, well, a bit monotonous. The bread aisle is a monochrome light brown (occasionally accented by, oddly enough, brown shelves), the dairy case a washed out sea of white plastic bathed in a pale fluorescent glow, the men’s undershirts an undifferentiated mass of white, brown and light gray. It’s no wonder, then, that consumers crave a little variety in packaging and presentation. It’s not just to make the scenery a little less boring; it also makes products dramatically easier to find. Read More »

MarketPulse

Travel Innovation: Who’s Leading the Charge?

Big brands are often the last to catch on to changing consumer behavior.  There are few industries where this is more visible than airline travel, where frazzled consumers have long begged the major players to deliver an experience that exceeds the “punishment for a crime you did not commit” bar.

Iconoculture recently reported on an unsettling trend in consumer travel—as airline innovation fails to keep pace with consumer demands, consumers are either rewarding smaller players like Suite Arrival (who delivers TSA-friendly personal items from popular brands directly to travelers’ hotel room) or inventing their own “DIY” approaches to make travel less frustrating. Read More »

MarketPulse

Does It Make Sense to Market Happiness to the Angry?

Everywhere we look, there’s evidence that consumers are a little more skeptical, a little more cynical, and sometimes even a little angry. While these consumer sentiments are widely recognized by marketers, many brands continue with the feel-good aspects of their message: family, friendship, security, trust, and even hope.  At the same time, Surly Brewing and Angry Little Girl totes are migrating from niche to mainstream with a different message—you’ve got attitude, and we understand that. Red Tettemer illustrates the approach perfectly in Tub Gin’s recent campaign:

One of the sharpest subversive ads of the year (a humble opinion) is available at http://www.tubgin.com/, and click on “A short, short story”.

These brands offer just a few examples of a broader trend in tapping directly into the edgier, snarkier sentiments of today’s consumer (Whitney had to tell me what snarky means).

Iconoculture—MLC’s new partner for bringing real-time consumer insights to our members—has picked up on this trend in its most recent research on “Subversive Branding.”  Iconoculture’s findings point marketers in an interesting direction: while subversive branding can breathe new life into our marketing messages, it also runs the risk of alienating consumers. Read More »

MarketPulse

Cultural Relevance: Laughing is a Good Sign

When we started exploring innovation from a marketing perspective a few months ago, Andy Armstrong left a copy of Baked In: Creating Products and Businesses that Market Themselves by Alex Bogusky and John Winsor on my desk—a fantastic read on market-driven innovation.  I was only a few dozen pages into the book when I hit a particularly insightful piece of guidance:

“Make a list of the cultural trends that influence your consumers’ behavior.  Take your time; all of the items on this list will not be immediately apparent.  Stay with it, and you will gradually observe more and more.  Be a good observer.  Remove yourself from your own cultural perspective.  Look for the absurdities, the incongruities, the things that don’t necessarily make sense.  You will begin to laugh as you start to see the culture from the outside.  (Laughing is a good sign).”

Bogusky’s hypothesis underpinning this advice is simple: consumers are participants in a culture first and an economy second—they’re much more likely to spend their hard-earned dollars on culturally relevant products than culturally ambivalent products.  If a brand wins the cultural relevance game, they’ll likely see the economic benefits as well. Read More »