Posts tagged "Higher Purpose"

consumer interests and passions

What’s Ahead in 2017: Food Ideology Drives Business Growth

January 17th, 2017 Posted by brand marketing, Brand preference, Human behavior, retail brand relevance, shopper behavior 0 comments on “What’s Ahead in 2017: Food Ideology Drives Business Growth”

Beliefs and Business Now Bedfellows

Nielsen’s recent study, “Unlocking the Millennial Mindset” underscores just how far we’ve come on the continuum from product feature and benefit selling to something akin to religion-style commitments in how brands and retailers come to market. Millennial consumers especially expect companies to behave openly and conscientiously.

  • 81 percent want to know more about how foods are produced
  • 80 percent want access to the behind-the-scenes story on how companies operate
  • 73 percent are willing to pay more for sustainable brands
  • 81 percent are willing to pay more for foods with a health benefit
  • 51 percent check package labels for evidence of social and environmental impact

Pressing on every corner of the food and beverage industry is a pervasive consumer desire for greater meaning, higher purpose and ethical business practices from the brands and retailers they prefer.

Ideology is rapidly becoming the new ‘currency of commerce’ as consumers seek to be a part of something that’s greater than themselves. As a result deeper, genuine values and beliefs match, and in some cases exceed, improved formulas as a choice and purchase driver.

Quick litmus test:

  1. Is your business driven by a profound, visible, human-relevant belief system?
  2. Is your company grounded in and built on a higher purpose?
  3. Does your food or beverage brand have a recognizable soul?

At the root of this purpose-driven phenomenon is cultural change. And nowhere can this be seen in greater relief than the food industry’s passing of the leadership baton: emerging brands with a clear mission and belief system are gaining significant share of interest and engagement over their less ideologically-informed legacy brand forbearers.

Ideology, in fact, has risen to be an essential part of the recipe for crafting an engaging brand proposition; one that will invariably insert the consumer’s interests and passions at the top of go-to-market strategy. Some of these consumer-relevant interests and passions include:

  • Changing the food system
  • Protecting the environment
  • Eliminating hunger
  • Supporting family farming
  • Rewarding sustainable agriculture processes
  • Offering super transparency
  • Improving health and wellbeing

Brands as Enablers of Being Your Best

In essence, brands that contribute to the betterment of people and society, while rethinking industrial food practices that have defined the industry for 50 years, are on the more prosperous path. To be clear, this is deeper than company mission statement stalwarts like treating employees and vendors fairly and responsibly.

Food ideology has more in common with religious principles than it does with garden-variety mission statements.

What’s going on here? The consumer has evolved. What people care about has shifted.

The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion every year publishes the results of a national poll on New Year resolutions. And for the first time in 2017, Being a Better Person rose to number one, edging out weight loss, the perennial winner in three previous polls.

Better person-ship plays a role in how consumers are making brand and retail choices. It is an expression of their profound interest in healthy lifestyle, the environment and doing good for others.

Actions consumers take in brand purchase are now symbolic representations of the values they espouse. When a brand puts beliefs and values at the center of business strategy, it is catering to this notion of improvement in a tangible, meaningful way. The devotion to ideological principles also infers and imbues the brand with markers of higher quality and integrity.

Putting beliefs and values at the center of your business isn’t about just doing good for its own sake! In the end, brands with belief at their core are in alignment as enablers – helping people be, and achieve, their best. The metrics of this approach will continue to play out in share shifts and emergence of new categories. These new categories will arise from innovations; not just in formula or ingredients, but also in brand and business behavior and credo.

The Higher Purpose Audit

So what’s the optimal approach? There’s no one-size fits all solution. Every business is unique and requires a custom-designed approach – whether it’s refinement of a current mission or the development of a new strategy from scratch.

Emergent provides this due diligence in the form of a Higher Purpose Audit designed to assess current conditions in a client’s category, an inventory of brand and business practices and behaviors that may be aligned or inconsistent with the right ideology. We translate that audit into tangible strategies and ideas that will inform brand position, marketing and communication.

The end game: harnessing the requirement of true ideology as a business builder.

Looking for more food for thought? Subscribe to our blog.

Bob Wheatley is the CEO of Chicago-based Emergent, the healthy living agency. Emergent provides integrated brand strategy, communications and insight solutions to national food, beverage, home and lifestyle companies.  Emergent’s unique and proprietary transformation and growth focus helps organizations navigate, engage and leverage consumers’ desire for higher quality, healthier product or service experiences that mirror their desire for higher quality lifestyles. For more information, contact [email protected] and follow on Twitter @BobWheatley.

ROP eBook on iPad

Purpose as Center of Business Strategy

November 17th, 2016 Posted by Human behavior, Insight, Uncategorized 0 comments on “Purpose as Center of Business Strategy”

Pros weigh in

Emergent recently formed a collaborative relationship with Toronto-based Fresh Squeezed Ideas, a firm focused on helping brands build stronger more relevant and powerful strategies through Behavioral Science research.

This move is consistent with our belief that deep understanding of consumer interests, passion and motivations is required to build communications that engage consumers powerfully and credibly.

Today, we are releasing our first joint publication Purpose: Driving Business Strategy – addressing one of the most important issues now at the forefront of building sustainable growth: rallying business and marketing plans around a company’s Higher Purpose.

Purpose Driving Business Strategy
Why? The purpose-built organization is in a much stronger position to generate meaningful relationships with consumers, who increasingly seek from the brands they care about values and beliefs that mirror their own.

Click here to download our featured article. I think you’ll find it an interesting overview of our shared insight.

Would love to hear your thoughts on this!

Looking for more food for thought? Subscribe to our blog.

Bob Wheatley is the CEO of Chicago-based Emergent, the healthy living agency. Emergent provides integrated brand strategy, communications and insight solutions to national food, beverage, home and lifestyle companies.  Emergent’s unique and proprietary transformation and growth focus helps organizations navigate, engage and leverage consumers’ desire for higher quality, healthier product or service experiences that mirror their desire for higher quality lifestyles. For more information, contact [email protected] and follow on Twitter @BobWheatley.

The Relationship Economy

Part 2: The Emergent Credo for Food Retail Growth

October 4th, 2016 Posted by food experiences, Retail brand building, retail brand relevance, Supermarket strategy 0 comments on “Part 2: The Emergent Credo for Food Retail Growth”

Planning Insights to Leverage the Changing Dynamics

In part 1 of The Emergent Credo for Food Retail Growth we explored the changing dynamics impacting long-term success and growth of Food Retail in the U.S. Here in Part 2, Emergent, the healthy living agency, provides insights to leverage these changing dynamics for your marketing plans.

For consumers, food is a high involvement category. They are ready and willing to get involved with retailers who understand and respect their lifestyle interests and goals.

Supporting these food-centric consumers requires a strategic pivot from transactional thinking to relationship thinking in the business and marketing plan. This can best be described in three words as: help-over-hype: helping the consumer over simply hyping the product benefits.

By focusing your marketing efforts to address consumers as three-dimensional people rather than targets and engaging them as you would a friend rather than a prospect, provides the kind of authentic connection people are looking for with others and with products and services they care about. This is the “humanization” of marketing.

We will witness increased humanization of supermarket marketing strategy through the deployment of respected experts in external and store communication, including:

  • The Chef: Inspiration and Creativity
  • The Farmer: Source and Craftsmanship
  • The Culinary expert: Guidance and Learning
  • The Wellness Agent: Curating Choice and Managing Lifestyle

What role does food retail serve in this new eco-system of food friendly culture and desire for better quality?

It’s all about the food – its preparation and social experiences around the table. Thus, retail can own an important position as the architect of cooking inspiration, enhancing kitchen skills and menu ideas, providing expert healthy lifestyle guidance, while offering unique culinary experiences and sensory adventures inside the store.

All of these insights bear a common element: putting the consumer at the center of strategy and looking at the business in terms of solving their health, wellness and culinary lifestyle needs.

Four key strategic guideposts inform the recipe for growth and success:

1. Higher purpose must drive the entire retail concept and plan.

People buy belief as much as they purchase products. You mission should be front and center in the business plan. And that purpose needs to be a real, human relevant purpose not just maximizing shareholder returns and P&L objectives.

2. Relevant content, information and guidance provide the grist for customer engagement.

Help over hype is the litmus test for effective engagement at a time when consumers run in the opposite direction from self-serving sales messaging.

3. Validation is required to secure trust and belief.

The deployment of outside expert, third party voices and influencers are vital to credibility and to securing the trust of your customers.

4. Store experience closes the deal.

What happens inside your stores is the last mile to a lasting relationship. When your store inspires culinary adventure, and serves the interest in healthy lifestyle – you have the right formula for an enduring and profitable relationship.

By embracing the consumer fully in strategic planning, you immediately increase the levels of salience and relevance to their needs and interests. Retail businesses now operate successfully when relationship building is at the forefront of go-to-market strategy.

After all, we’re now living in The Relationship Economy.

Bob Wheatley is the CEO of Chicago-based Emergent, the healthy living agency. Emergent provides integrated brand strategy, communications and insight solutions to national food, beverage, home and lifestyle companies.  Emergent’s unique and proprietary transformation and growth focus helps organizations navigate, engage and leverage consumers’ desire for higher quality, healthier product or service experiences that mirror their desire for  higher quality lifestyles. For more information, contact [email protected] and follow on Twitter @BobWheatley.

brand story

The Art of Brand Storytelling

July 8th, 2016 Posted by brand marketing, Brand preference 0 comments on “The Art of Brand Storytelling”
The formula to get it right every time…

Been to a great movie lately? One with a story so captivating you wanted to see it more than once? Storytelling at its finest draws us in and makes us feel part of the events as they unfold. We identify with characters that seem relatable to us and we enjoy the rollercoaster ride of action and tension leading to some form of satisfying resolution.

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Client-Agency Relationship

There’s a reason you never hear about Client-Agency Vendorships

May 26th, 2016 Posted by Growth, Insight, Transformation 0 comments on “There’s a reason you never hear about Client-Agency Vendorships”
In marketing you truly reap what you sow.

In marketing and communications, time plus experience combine to help provide hard evidence of what works extraordinarily well vs. what constitutes the far more frequent base hit rather than home run outcome.

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Tin Man

The Trouble With The Tin Man

May 12th, 2016 Posted by Uncategorized 0 comments on “The Trouble With The Tin Man”
When the mechanics of business replaces heart.

Ok, so the Tin Man wasn’t supposed to have a heart because he’s a machine, right? And yet it was the heart he wanted, and most likely needed.

(more…)

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