Credibility and authenticity

In my previous column I had argued that credibility and authenticity are the two key areas where the brands will face a big issue. Especially when the lines between public and private spaces are blurring at a rapid pace. Brands too have kept a marked distinction between private space and public space. And the brands will want to keep it that way, as this allows them to ‘control’ the communication, show the good face and create the right impression. Obviously social media is putting pressure on them to blur this distinction. Let me illustrate this through two examples and two contrasting strategies that brands followed. One worked very well, the other never weathered the storm The first example is from Domino’s. Two of its employees posted seriously grossed out videos over the net of them spoiling the pizza. If you have the stomach for it, you can access them at you tube. No wonder there was outrage over what the two employees had done. The response from the brand was swift and they allowed it to be played out over social media where it started from. The brand apologized and uploaded apology videos on you tube. It also took penal action against the two employees for destroying the reputation and trust of the brand. The blog sphere initially ridiculed the brand but came around to champion the brand’s cause. The second example is of Nestle and the pressure it from Greenpeace for using Palm oil in its chocolates. When Greenpeace uploaded videos on you tube accusing the corporation of destroying rain forests, the world of social media went into overdrive. The brand first bullied the sites and got the video removed, and then it also removed ‘offensive’ comments from other sites. The controversy soon became a firestorm that singed the brand. Even after pledging that it is snapping ties from tainted palm oil suppliers, the firestorm kept on raging. Clearly the strong arm tactics of a big brand did not help and it only further fuelled the fire Both these are examples of how the boundaries between private and public space is diminishing. In both cases the trouble started when the private space became public. In one case the insiders demolished the line, and in other a pressure group forced the brand to let the private space become public. I am not saying if this was right or wrong, all I am saying is that this seems to be the new way. In the case Domino’s the brand narrated a story of credibility. It acknowledged the problem, addressed the issue, allowed people to peep into the private space of the brand and didn’t hide behind the curtains. The consumers believed in the authenticity of the story and reposed their trust in the brand. In today’s world where consumers play voyeurs a peep inside was a great way to regain trust. In case of Nestle, the brand told a story that wasn’t authentic. Instead of allowing a peep in, it hid behind dark curtains. It made it difficult for consumers to see what really was happening. By the time it allowed the public to peep in, much of the damage was done. And because the story was not authentic the story was never credible. Despite being a large and respected brand, it decided to be bully and not an engaging story teller. The best example of this diminishing line is the new Nike communication where the Facebook fans of the brand were accorded ‘insider’ status. Nike unveiled its “write the future’ campaign to Facebook fans before it took to mass media. Over 100,000 fans saw the three minute ad before it was aired. Nike allowed access to its fans to not only the brand story, but also the key characters of the story i.e. the iconic footballers. In this new paradigm where brands need to be great story tellers, brands have to be about authenticity and credibility. It is not that this is necessary in this day and age of social media only. Social media may not be the in thing tomorrow, authenticity and credibility will always be the currency for the brand to transact in.

Published in 4Ps of Marketing and Advertising, 4rth June, 2010

Is being rude the new cool?

Last week I was attending a launch conference where the MC was introducing the key people present with fanfare and gusto, and the crowd was just sitting and not clapping for anything. It looked a very rude gesture, because the audience would have applauded the guests anywhere else in the world. In fact an overseas guest even wondered as to why people were so indifferent, because in his culture, not applauding at such an event is a surefire indicator of being rude Reader’s Digest has just announced that Mumbai is the rudest city in the world. I think the magazine has done grave injustice to Delhi or Chennai and many other cities. We seem to be thriving in being rude. We take it as our right to be rude. Sample this; we don’t believe that pedestrians have a way of right on roads. We don’t believe that we should stop on red lights.

We don’t believe that we should wish someone when we meet them. We don’t believe that we should thank someone for doing something for us. Please and thank you have gone out of our vocabulary. Look around at forums that exist on many news websites.

Trawl around them and see what people are commenting about. Almost every comment is rude, full of expletives and using cuss words seems to be the trendiest thing to do. And to think that forums are moderated and many comments are never published, tells a very compelling story of being rude! Look around at news channels and reality shows. I had the misfortune of catching one of the episodes of “Desi Girl” Now I am no fan of that genre of programming, but reality shows are a good indicator of pop culture and real social behaviour. After all people put out their best behaviour when the camera is trained at them. It was shocking to see the behaviour and the language used by some of the hosts and village elders against the very guests they were hosting in their house. One particular lady of the house literally pushed her guests around, the village sarpanch used foul language, and surprisingly they didn’t think that they were doing anything wrong.

Pity, we are land where our culture teaches us to be polite and be nice to guests!

Also look around how the news channels are playing out news. They were never sensitive, their coverage always has been marked by being insensitive. From Arushi murder case to Mangalore air crash to Jhariagram train crash, they have never displayed sensitivity. They have always thrust their mike at survivors and asked some really silly and insensitive questions. Despite constant debates and possibly pressure, they have chosen to remain rude in their tone of voice, because they believe that by being rude, they gain greater acceptance. So is being rude now becoming mainstream culture? Almost every available indicator seems to suggest that being nice and polite to fellow human being is not our culture. We need to be brash, loutish and crass.

So what are the implications that it can have on brands? Brand communication is all about context and content. Marketers spend endless hours researching the context and figure out the content. It is the context that helps us to define the insight and allows us to add multiple layers of benefits and resultant effects on brand communication. Now let’s add the environment to it and see what happens. These may be the new rules of engagement as I see them

The brands need to believe that only they have the right to exist in market place. Every competing brand has no right to exist, and if consumers buy the competing brands they shall be abused

All brands need to believe that the consumers need to be forced into listening to their messages. Which means all communication needs to be loud, screaming and threatening

All brands should deliberately demean every other brand even if they are not directly competing with them. The consumers do this all the time, and by implication they would love to see this It is a surprise that the brands haven’t caught up to this rude trend and have remained at their best behaviour despite the indicators from channels that carry their message.

Now the real issue: are the channels destroying the equity of the brands that they carry by being rude and insensitive? Will the consumers perceive the brand in good light when they see the brands placed in wrong channels? In this day and age of consumer power where the rules of communication are being rewritten because of crowd sourcing will the consumers force the change? Or being rude has become so much a part of lives that being nice is like being an oxymoron? It’s time to relook at ourselves and really change the environment. If media has the power to shape opinions, than it needs to display that and really change behaviour.

Being rude should never be cool

Published at http://www.mediaworldbuzz.com