“The successful company is not the one with the most brains, but the most brains acting in concert.” Musing on that thought from Peter Drucker, I wondered: if a successful company, business or organization is like a great concert, then how is the role of the leader of the organization like that of an orchestral concert conductor or a choirmaster? Here are some parallels that I saw.
The leader prompts and cues his players and directs execution and delivery of the performance.
The leader keeps time. You set the pace for your leadership team and for the organization as a whole. They will follow your lead. It’s your responsibility to adjust speed when needed as the performance progresses.
The leader maintains harmony between all the parts of the team.
The leader molds a team out of individual performers.
The leader follows the score. The analog of a score for a business is its vision, mission and strategic objectives. As leader, you are responsible for keeping the big picture in mind always, hearing the whole work and delivering the plan.
The leader delivers a quality product to the audience (your customers). You set the standard of quality for your group.
The leader listens to the individual performers on his team and monitors the harmony that they create together. The leader is visible to all the performers. The members of your team need to be able to see you and get their cues from you.
The leader gives the audience something to look at. In a classical performance, the orchestra conductor is the one who is usually doing the most moving. But whatever the context, the leader is usually the name, the face and the voice that the public sees and associates with the team. As leader, people are watching you and your actions count; remember this.
Emotion. That’s what the marketer and the advertiser are hoping that their commercial gets out of us. That their ad triggers a feeling—an emotional connection—with us, that we respond in some way. Desire. Wonder. Happiness. Lust. Sometimes, fear. But never apathy, never take-it-or-leave-it. That’s a commercial failure (in more ways than one).
Some of our strongest emotional responses are connected to our childhood and youth. That’s usually the time in our lives when we were most carefree, happiest, felt most loved, most desirable, in wonder of the world and everything in it (and most debt-free). And why advertisers often use nostalgic themes, and images of children and young people, in their work: to elicit those strong emotions within us and connect them with the product that they’re promoting.
Here is a brilliant new mashup video in which Don Draper of the TV show Mad Men pitches a novel technology product to clients: the new Timeline profile feature on Facebook.
No, quantum physicists haven’t achieved time travel (and least, not yet). The video's creator has simply edited a scene from an episode of the show and replaced images of the original product with Facebook’s Timeline. It's completely fictitious, of course (doubly so). It’s also amazing how it works seamlessly—and does a really good job of showing how Timeline will actually work.
And Don Draper demonstrates the power of nostalgia to communicate with an audience.
Click through to watch the video.* This post thanks to Digital Trends.
*PS: the original video link above no longer works; the clip may have been taken down as a result of a rights infringement claim by one of the companies involved (which would be a pity). Here's another copy of the video that is still viewable at time of writing. The video was originally created by Eric Leist.
Remember some of the great commercials of the Caribbean? The ones we (well, I) remember reading, watching and listening to while growing up, that promoted the classic brands and products of the region?
We're going to take a closer look at some of our great Caribbean brands in the days ahead on this blog. For now, we rummaged through the YouTube archive
and found three of our favourite classic television ads. They all happen to be for drinks and spirits—a product category that is a strength for this region.
Malibu White Rum
This one is from the 1980’s when
Malibu was being made with Jamaican rum. The technique of photographing
everything in silhouette—echoing the visual style of the Malibu logo itself—is
brilliant. And Marley's music makes it sing:
Cockspur Rum
More recent vintage, I think (maybe the 90's?). Not
great but it got your attention the first few times you saw it: a brilliantly-coloured rooster taking
a boss-man stroll around busy New York City:
Lucozade Energy
I love this commercial—one of the best, ever. Cartoon animation makes it timeless, the soca music is
fantastic, the wit sweet (the bit at the end is the best). Imagine: a non-alcoholic drink that makes you want to party. This was the first in a series from a few years ago that had the 'stick man' getting out of all sorts of sticky situations thanks to Lucozade:
Bonus: Tia Maria
I came back and slipped this one in after finishing the original post. Tia Maria was for decades the iconic Jamaican liqueur. The video comments say that this is an Australian ad but I remember watching it on TV all the time as a youngster; the words to the jingle came right back to me. Again, the music makes this commercial magic:
What are some of your choices for other great Caribbean commercials?
The
Caribbean has been the crossroads of world history for 500 years. In this roundup
of last week’s marketing news from around the region, we see Caribbean people
and brands continuing to make connections around the globe. Our stories link
Trinidad to Jamaica to Ghana to England to Barbados to Panama. Follow
along.
Brand Bravo. Trinidadian cricketer
Dwayne Bravo is seizing the future and shaping what happens next for him after
West Indies cricket. Taking his cue from sport celebrities in other parts of
the world, he’s about to monetize his appeal beyond the cricket field and
develop “Brand Bravo”. He has just released a music video collaboration with Jamaican
dancehall artist Beenie Man (and featuring Guyana’s Timeka Mashall), called “Beenie
Man & Bravo”. Soon to follow will be his official website and the Dwayne
Bravo Cricket Star Search.
[via caribpr.com]
Bravo
has certainly been versatile on the cricket pitch, as both a batsman and
medium-fast bowler. He also has been
blessed, in my view, with real charisma and star power even from his professional
debut. He always exudes a joy and passion on the field, regardless of
the team’s fortunes, with a smile nearly as wide as the cricket sightscreen.
Recent injuries seem to have sidelined his West Indies team career but he’s
bounced back to find favour in the IPL and other Twenty20 leagues elsewhere.
I’d
love to—and expect to—see those values of versatility, resilience and passion
demonstrated in whatever Brand Bravo ultimately becomes. After watching the music video
for “Beenie Man & Bravo”, I predict that Dwayne will most likely focus his
brand building efforts in non-musical directions in the future. Anyway, we sincerely
wish you tons of success, DB.
[via SFLCN.com]
Jamaica Links.Jamaica is
now helping to maintain the connection between the country of Ghana and the Ghanaian
expatriate community in Great Britain.
JN Money Services, the remittance
arm of the Jamaica National Building Society, has launched a new Ghana Money Transferbrand in the UK,
in partnership with the Merchant Bank of Ghana.
Remittances
from its Diaspora population remain an important source of foreign currency
inflows into Ghana and this service targets the 90,000 Ghanaians living in
Britain. National football star and English Premier League striker,
Asamoah Gyan, has come on board as the brand ambassador.
JN
Money Services has been operating in the UK for over 25 years is said to be the
second largest remitter of funds to Jamaica, with branch offices and agents in
12 major cities across England.
[via ChelseaFC.com]
Sporting Barbados.Barbados has just signed
a three-year promotional deal with the English football club
Chelsea.
The partnership will give the Barbados brand valuable exposure to
Chelsea’s fans in the UK as well as in North America and the Caribbean. There
is also a social component to the deal as Chelsea FC and the Barbados Tourism
Authority plan to work together on various community projects in the two
countries, including coaching programmes.
ECB
Barbados
tourism planners have been keeping busy on the field: this football deal
follows on from Barbados’ name sponsorship of the national T20 club cricket
tournament in England this past summer. TheBarbados
Cockspur Rum Club Twenty20competition brought exposure to 750 clubs across
England and Wales. Ealing Cricket Club won the competition final on September
19 (beating Chester-Le-Street) and the match was broadcast live on Sky Sports.
Barbados
Tourism Authority says that its promotional theme for 2012 will be The Year of Sport: From Grass Roots to World
Class, as it plans to leverage Barbados’ impressive reputation for hosting
world-class sporting events. So, stay tuned.
Barbados Telecoms. TeleBarbados, a voice
and data telecommunications services provider, has launched a premium voice
& internet service package for residential users, branded “VIP 4G Broadband”.
Bandwidth up to 10 Mbps is available, with unlimited local and long-distance
calls to the USA, United Kingdom and Canada.
Panama Silver Men. We couldn’t end this post
without mentioning another cross-Caribbean connection—one that also goes across
history. Barbadian filmmaker Alison Saunders is preparing to make a documentary
telling the story of the thousands of Bajans and other West Indians who migrated
to Panama at the beginning of the 20th century to help construct the
Panama Canal.
Panama Fever: A
Caribbean Journey is
currently in fund-raising and pre-production. It was one of the regional projects
selected for participation in the CaribbeanTales incubator held at last month’s
Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).
Nearly 60,000 “silver men” are thought to
have traveled from Barbados to Panama to help build the Canal. Their motivation
was economic and the flow of remittances to families back at home helped
to stave off poverty and enable a measure of social advancement for tens of thousands
of Barbadians.
Alison
Saunders made her debut as a feature film writer and director in 2007 with Hit for Six!, a Caribbean drama about,
of course, cricket.
By now, we’re all familiar with some of the subtle techniques and signals that marketers and advertisers use to influence our perceptions and purchasing choices. The objective is to get the consumer to want the product, or to want to buy it right now.
“Early bird” discount prices on tickets for concerts and shows. Airline fares advertised as low as $9.99. Intimating how using this product can keep us, the consumer, healthy and youthful. Giving us a good laugh that not only makes the brand seem cool but that we just have to share with our friends (or on our blogs).
[Elizabeth Thomsen/Flickr]
In this piece from Fast Company, branding guru Martin Lindstrom presents an except from his new book “Brandwashed: Tricks Companies Use to Manipulate our Minds and Persuade Us to Buy”.
It’s a case study of Whole Foods Market, the US natural and organic foods supermarket chain. Lindstrom reveals some of the smart, subtle ways that Whole Foods stage-manages its store environments in order to put customers into the most receptive state of mind to buy.
We learn from Lindstrom:
- why there’s so much ice everywhere in the supermarket
- why that apple you had for lunch might hold the secret of eternal youth
< and why this colour is the absolute perfect shade of yellow for a banana.
You will probably recognize some of these very things from your own local shopping. There’s nothing wrong with what Whole Foods or any other grocer is doing, of course. It happens everywhere, not just at the supermarket: in the fragrance department of any major retail store; in the car showroom; at the Apple Store. Today, retail marketing is as much human psychology—and theatre—as it is commerce.
Barbados will host its second annual Food & Wine and Rum Festival this coming November 18-21.
It will be four days of cooking demonstrations, rum and wine tastings and gourmet dinners to be held at some of the most fabulous restaurants, estates and attractions on the island.
Eight celebrity international chefs will be coming to cook, including Ming Tsai and Marcus Samuelsson. They will be joining six Bajan chefs, along with local and visiting wine and spirits experts, to put on an epicurean feast for all the senses.
We love the website.It's both simple and beautifully designed, with gorgeous use of colour and photography and nicely integrated media. The images of the cocktails and plated dishes from last year’s event make you want to dive right into your computer screen.
With so many world-class restaurants and chefs, and its own Zagat guide, Barbados
has aspirations of becoming the culinary capital of the Caribbean. And, of course, it is the very birthplace of rum, which has been
made in Barbados for 350 years.
Cheers to the Barbados Tourism Authority for building such a great website (unfortunately, there's no web designer credit shown on the site, so we can’t give them their props).
If you love good food and drink (who doesn’t?), then the third week in November in Barbados will definitely be the place to be.
As
a communications practitioner and a member of both Toastmasters International
and the International Association of Business Communicators, I am passionate
about achieving and promoting excellence in both oral and written communication,
in all spheres of life. This post is the first in an occasional series where I’ll
share examples of great communication that I’ve found and techniques that
anyone can use to improve their own speaking and writing.
[Alex Dunne/Flickr]
Padmasree Warrior is a Senior Vice
President of Engineering and the Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Cisco, the
company that builds the hardware and software that make up the heart, bones and
nerves of the global internet.
She
is a respected leader in her company—responsible for driving innovation and
strategy and overseeing the efforts of 24,000 engineers—as well as in her
industry. She has been named one of the 100 most creative people in business
and in 2009 was on President Obama’s shortlist of candidates to become the first
CTO of the US federal government.
Here
is the video of a keynote speech that Padmasree gave at the 2009 Women of
Vision Awards ceremony honouring outstanding women in the field of technology. In
it, she talks about leadership and managing
personal change.I think it is a great example of excellence in public
speaking. Padmasree delivers herself in a way that is engaging, authentic and memorable
and she does so with great skill.
Regardless
of whether your next speaking assignment is a talk before a social group, a
business presentation or a dinnertime keynote address, here are five things you can learn and apply from this talk to improve
your next speech.
1.Speak from your personal
experience. Padmasree
devotes the biggest part of her talk here to sharing the story of her own personal
and professional growth, beginning as a teenager in southern India and later traveling
to the USA to further study and begin her career as an engineer. In talking
about her life, she could relate to her audience—and them to her—since she was
speaking to current and future women leaders working in Silicon Valley, like
herself.
If you are invited to speak to a group, remember that it’s because they think you have something they want to hear. In
deciding what to say, bear in mind that speaking out of your own experience or
personal conviction will enable you to be most authentic and more engaging. Look
into your own life for the experiences, insights or lessons that are most
meaningful to you and that reflect your chosen subject; then share them in a
way that will relate to and benefit your audience.
2.Add a little laughter.
Right
at the beginning of her remarks, Padmasree is able to share in a natural, humorous
way the conflicting advice that her friends gave her while she was preparing to
deliver this very speech. Laughter puts everyone at ease—the speaker as well as
the audience—and lets the audience know that, hey, this is someone I could listen
to for the next 15 or 20 minutes. Never try to force jokes into your speech—especially
if you’re terrible at telling them!—but it’s always good to start with
something that will make everyone laugh a little and relax.
3.Tell ‘em what you’re
gonna tell ‘em. The
speaker here starts the core of her talk by listing the five life lessons that
she wants to share and then goes on to elaborate each point. This is a classic
technique speakers use to build a talk: first, outline your main points, then develop
each one in turn and, finally, recap and close. The audience knows exactly
where you are going at any point and can follow along.
It’s best to make no more than three key points in a short speech—and never
more than 5 or 6 even in a longer one. Outlining and reiterating your key points
gives your audience a mental “frame” they can use to hang your words on and helps
them to better recall your message after you’ve left.
4.Smile. Padmasree’s smile is
broad and warm all the way through her talk. A genuine smile while you speak
helps gives your voice a warm and pleasant tone, shows that you’re relaxed (even
if you don’t quite feel that way) and
puts your audience at ease. So smile early and often whenever you have to speak
in public.
5.Practice. I’m sure that this masterful
presentation by Padmasree didn’t happen by accident. From her choice of words, speech
structure, poise and body language, you can clearly see that a good deal of preparation
must have gone into delivering the final result. No matter whether your own
speaking commitment is a major keynote address or just a few minutes of
remarks, practice and rehearsal beforehand will always pay dividends on the
day. You will get to hear and improve your voice, to fine-tune the words of
your script and to really see how effectively the whole speech comes together.
Practice saying the words—out loud—and if you can, do so in front of another
person(s) and get their honest feedback. When you take time to prepare in
advance, it shows respect for your audience and allows you to deliver at your
best.
Every
businessperson and professional—man or woman—can take something valuable away
from this excellent talk by Padmasree Warrior in which she also shares the five skills women need to be effective
leaders today and in the future.
The
video is in three short segments, you can begin watching the first part here.
Enjoy.
BONUS: Early in her career as an executive, Padmasree Warrior sought out help to strengthen her personal communication skills. Feedback from her colleagues at the time indicated that she was seen as a brilliant and talented rising star. However, her peers thought that she was too soft-spoken and not assertive enough as a communicator and leader. I think you’ll agree that her years of work and practice in this area have really paid off! Padmasree sought out an executive coach but if you’re looking for a proven, inexpensive way to improve your own communication skills, consider looking into Toastmasters.
The
Information Society of Barbados will
host a major Information and Communication Technology (ICT) conference next
month.
@event Caribbean 2011
will
take place October 25 & 26 at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre.
Taking
the theme ICT: the Catalyst for Economic
Development, the ISB’s conference will explore how Barbados and the
Caribbean region can best leverage ICT’s to advance its economic development
and prosperity.
Some of the slated speakers
There is an impressive lineup of scheduled speakers and presenters who
will bring perspectives from Barbados, Trinidad & Tobago, the Cayman
Islands, Malta, North America, the UK and elsewhere.
Among them is Michael T.
Jones, Google Inc.’s chief technology advocate, who will make a keynote
presentation on how Google is making good on its mission to organize the
world’s information and make it universally accessible.
The
conference program will cover issues such as technology innovation; e-business
and cloud computing; privacy and security in the digital age; leveraging social
media; and healthcare innovation.
Special sessions will focus on how
governments can use ICT to transform productivity and improve service to
citizens. There will also be opportunities for local developers to learn how to
get into the potentially lucrative business of building mobile apps.
An
ICTtrade exhibition will run in parallel with
the conference and afford local, Caribbean and international vendors, service
providers, consultants and entrepreneurs with the opportunity to showcase their
products and services and do business.
All
details of the conference programme, exhibition and registration are available
at www.isb.org.bb/events.
The ISB anticipates that
this gathering will be an opportunity to re-energize the ICT and economic landscapes in Barbados and
the Caribbean. If you’re a technology professional, information user, business
decision-maker, government or policy specialist, entrepreneur, vendor,
consultant or educator—then plan to be there and join the conversation.
Here’s our own roundup and commentary on what’s been happening in marketing in
the Caribbean so far during the month of September.
BEER OF BARBADOS. Banks (Barbados) Breweries kicked off
celebrations of its 50th anniversary on September 6 with a one-day, island-wide
promotion on its flagship product, Banks Beer.
Bajans were able to get a cold one for just 50 cents, said
to be the same price that a Banks retailed for when the brewery started
operations in 1961. Special vouchers were distributed in that day’s newspapers
and consumers soaked up the nostalgia at bars and rumshops well into the
night—no doubt generating lots of goodwill for the brand.
Banks Breweries has since begun a series of full-page
newspaper advertorials that celebrate the company’s achievements as well as its
social contribution in areas such as sport, culture and barroom décor, i.e. its
calendar girls. (No doubt the company leveraged all of the extra news- papers it
helped to sell during the one-day special to help pay for the press.)
We join
with them in saying, “Cheers to 50 years” and look forward to what the rest of
this anniversary year will bring.
HEALTHY CARIBBEAN. The Healthy Caribbean Coalition received
half a million text messages of support from across the region during its “Get
the Message” media campaign to raise awareness for action to combat chronic
non-communicable diseases (CNCD). The Coalition aimed to mobilize wide social
support in preparation for the region’s participation at the United Nations
Summit on CNCD’s to be held during the week of September 19 in New York.
JAMAICA TOURISM. Jamaica plans to mount an “aggressive”
marketing campaign inChina to boost travel between the two countries. So said
Tourism Minister, Edmund Bartlett, while he attended the China-Caribbean
Economic and Trade Co-operation Forum held last week in Port of Spain,
Trinidad.
LIAT CABIN ADVERTISING. LIAT the Caribbean airline has introduced
cabin advertising aboard its aircraft. The airline is partnering with Global
Onboard Partners, based in Atlanta, to offer clients—such as Dominica’s tourism
agency—advertising space on its seat backs. See our earlier post here.
NETFLIX COMES TO THE CARIBBEAN. Netflix launched its
internet movie streaming service in Latin America and the Caribbean on
September 5. Beginning in Brazil, the company says that it rolled out service
to 43 countries and territories during the first week of September. The monthly
subscription is US $7.99 (same price as in the domestic U.S.) with a “try
before you buy” offer for the first month.
Netflix’s service in the US is reported to already account
for nearly one-quarter of the traffic over the internet there during peak times.
Will demand here in the English-speaking Caribbean proceed to choke the
bandwidth of the region’s telcos (who have their own internet TV services in
the works)? How will it impact patronage of local cinemas and DVD sale and
rental businesses—both legal and bootleg? And will everything we watch be
dubbed into Spanish?
Let the show begin and we’ll find out. (You can read this piece by Michele Marius for more details and analysis.)
REDjet TO JAMAICA. The new low-cost airline REDjet initiated
flights between Trinidad and Guyana and announced that it will begin flying to Jamaica from November. Meanwhile, competition continues to translate into
better deals for travelers, with both LIAT and Caribbean Airlines continuing to
promote their own low fares and discount specials.
RED STRIPE. Beer is hot (only in a figurative sense,
thankfully) right now at both ends of the Caribbean. Red Stripe, the iconic
Jamaican brand, is shaking things up at home witha new advertising campaigndevised by Prism Communications. It’s built around the character RED, a
Jamaican brown bear who just loves drinking Red Stripe.
You’re probably smiling at the thought already, and that’s
the point. The campaign is meant to be different, funny—have you ever seen a
bear bogle to dancehall music?—and it seems to be attracting attention: the
Facebook page already has more than 12,000 fans and the series of commercials on YouTube
has been viewed thousands of times. RED the bear has his own Twitter
account.
Red Stripe is attempting to appeal to a younger demographic
and is thus making social media the interactive centerpiece of this campaign.
It’s interesting that both they and Banks Breweries in Barbados have each
clearly tried to create an appealing and engaging Facebook presence for their brand
but have not reflected their new campaigns on their main brand websites. This
is a trend that we’ll probably see more of as businesses opt to put fewer
resources into maintaining “static” presences on the web.
Here’s my own favourite RED commercial so far but go on and
take a look at the whole series:
SCOTIABANK AERO. Scotiabank introduced its AERO Platinum
MasterCard credit cards in Barbados, Jamaica, Belize and Turks & Caicos,
and Platinum VISA Card in Trinidad & Tobago.The card comes with a new
travel rewards programme, AERO* Rewards. Cardholders can earn points that may
be redeemed for not only air miles—on any airline—but also towards hotel stays,
car rentals, cruises and more.
The
world waited, eyes fixed on lane five in the stadium in Daegu, South Korea, and
then — BAM! Usain Bolt shot out of the blocks—only, the starter’s pistol had not,
in fact, gone off.
[svenner67/Flickr]
A
collective groan was heard around the globe (Bolt said something else, I
believe). The fastest man on earth, the one everyone had looked forward to see run
the 100 metre final, had messed up and taken himself out of the running. The false
start rule meant instant disqualification. There was to be no second chance
that day, no new record set, no historic performance made.
Just
like Bolt, a business can make a false start when introducing a new product or
service to the marketplace. (Some reports estimate that at least half of all
new product introductions fail.) What your company has to offer may be truly innovative
and inspired, your marketing and sales plans may be world class and your strategy
may confidently anticipate global domination.
But
it could all be scuttled as a result of a false start and disqualification on
your part. Here are three possible reasons:
1. The officials aren’t
ready for you. REDjet
discovered this earlier in the year while attempting to launch their new airline
service. After weeks of advertising super-low fares, taking passenger bookings
and announcing start-up dates across the Caribbean, the brakes were pulled by the
civil aviation authorities in Jamaica and Trinidad. The airline didn’t have the
regulatory approvals needed to proceed. Months of delay ensued. Fortunately for
us the traveling public, after negotiations and representations (by prime
ministers, among others) the issues were finally sorted and REDjet took to the
air and seems to be doing well so far.
The
lesson here is that, just as in Daegu stadium, unless you’ve obtained starter’s
orders for your product introduction—from the appropriate regulatory, legal and
commercial authorities in your market—you could be flying out of the blocks in
vain.
2. The crowd isn’t ready
for you.
The classic example here is, of course, New Coke. In the mid-80’s, the Coca
Cola company decided that it needed to tweak its famous formula in order to
meet increasing competition from other cola brands. “New Coke” was introduced
and generated immediate opposition from consumers all over the US, who just did
not appreciate the change in taste. The backlash was so severe, widespread and
sustained that the company was forced to reverse course and re-introduce classic
Coke within just three months.
RIM Playbook [khelvan/Flickr]
There
have been plenty of other examples in the tech arena. The Zune personal music
player has failed to get much traction over the years even for the mighty
Microsoft and is little more than a footnote in the age of iPod. And when the infamous
Windows Vista operating system was introduced in 2007, computer users in droves
opted not to upgrade but to stick
with Windows XP.
Earlier
this year—wanting to catch up to the huge demand for tablet computers that Apple
created with the iPad—RIM, the makers of BlackBerry, brought their Playbook
tablet to market. It was met with a collective yawn by the technical press and
consumers. Same thing happened to HP with its TouchPad; now it is virtually giving
them away in order to exit the business.
All
of these products would have had extensive audience research during their development
and the most sophisticated marketing resources at their introduction. But the
customer just wasn’t buying it at the time; or else the market leader had too strong
a grip on consumers’ minds for the new entrant to be able to make any headway
(more on that later).
The
new guy tripped up and fell right out of the blocks, while the eyes of the
crowd were fixed on the star-boy zooming up the track.
3. You ain’t ready. This week, the website
of the retailer Target crashed after it was overwhelmed by opening day demand for
a limited-edition range of products designed by the Italian luxury house Missoni.
Stock that was supposed to supply stores for a month sold out in a couple of
hours.
The
opening of online ticket sales earlier this year for the London 2012 Olympic
Games was, famously, a public relations nightmare, with many complaining that
there was insufficient transparency to the ticket allocation process. The
second round of sales held in June caused the ticketing website to crash,
creating further embarrassment.
The
chairman of Toyota has admitted that part of the reason behind the car manufacturer’s
recall disaster of 2010 was that the company had been focusing too much on
growth and new products and had, perhaps, let quality standards and attention
to detail slip.
These
are three examples of an organization putting their product out to market ahead of their capacity to properly deliver
or support it. Take this approach yourself and you risk leaving a dissatisfied
customer behind who may decide in the future that you’re simply a non-starter
in the race for their business.
That
may also be the situation for RIM and HP in the tablet computer business—that it’s
simply too late for them to catch up and climb the mountain that Apple has created with the iPad.
The
marketing guru Al Ries says that the company that comes to market first in any product category will usually
go on to dominate it over time. And if that competitor is as dominant as Usain
Bolt is as a sprinter, then—once he gets a good start and stays in form—all you
will end up doing is eating his dust.