“Innovation” died in 2008, killed off by overuse, misuse, narrowness, incrementalism and failure to evolve. It was done in by CEOs, consultants, marketeers, advertisers and business journalists who degraded and devalued the idea by conflating it with change, technology, design, globalization, trendiness, and anything “new.” It was done it by an obsession with measurement, metrics and math and a demand for predictability in an unpredictable world. The concept was also done in, strangely enough, by a male-dominated economic leadership that rejected the extraordinary progress in “uncertainty planning and strategy” being done at key schools of design that could have given new life to “innovation. To them, “design” is something their wives do with curtains, not a methodology or philosophy to deal with life in constant beta—life in 2009.
Nussbaum On Design
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Gatorade Changes Up Its Game
New iterations of Gatorade Thirst Quencher, the flagship Gatorade brand, will sport a large letter G next to the brand's iconic bolt. "For Gatorade, G represents the heart, hustle and soul of athleticism and will become a badge of pride for anyone who sweats," according to a company press release.
BrandWeek
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Clay St. Project lets P&G think outside the pyramid
A big Clay Street success story was P&G's Herbal Essences brand. After it was acquired from Clairol in 2001, sales plummeted and the brand was floundering so badly that retailers were threatening to no longer stock it. A Clay Street project was convened to find a way to resuscitate the brand and improve sales. The team agreed to target a hypothetical consumer who was in her late teens to early 20s and active, fun-loving and drawn to the brand's appeal to those interested in natural ingredients.
Cincinnati Enquirer
Cincinnati Enquirer
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Sales Down? Time To Dial Down The SKUs
There's a widespread consumer frustration out there, with many shoppers feeling there are too many choices, presented in a way that's needlessly complicated.
So in apparel, they want stores to be curators. You don't go to a museum to see every landscape ever painted--you want to see things from the 18th-century pastoral school. They want that kind of editing. They want retailers to stock brands that show they understand a certain lifestyle, especially now, coming off five years of hard-core brand identification. Take Juicy Couture. Fans know it's come a long way beyond that pink sweatsuit with "Juicy" on the bottom. They think, 'this brand knows I dress up sometimes, and that sometimes I want new sunglasses.'
MediaPost
So in apparel, they want stores to be curators. You don't go to a museum to see every landscape ever painted--you want to see things from the 18th-century pastoral school. They want that kind of editing. They want retailers to stock brands that show they understand a certain lifestyle, especially now, coming off five years of hard-core brand identification. Take Juicy Couture. Fans know it's come a long way beyond that pink sweatsuit with "Juicy" on the bottom. They think, 'this brand knows I dress up sometimes, and that sometimes I want new sunglasses.'
MediaPost
Saturday, December 20, 2008
FedEx Whites-Out the Kinko's Name
Some longtime customers are lamenting the imminent demise of the Kinko's sign, which FedEx will start removing from stores next year. Andy Sernovitz, an author and marketing consultant in Chicago, says he got more frustrated reader responses to a blog item he wrote about the name change than to any other. "It's not just a place you shop," he explains. "A Kinko's moment culminated in something big. It's the night before the term paper, and you've got to get to the frat party. It's your wedding invitation, your résumé, a big presentation."
Business Week
Business Week
Friday, December 19, 2008
Students At Parsons and The University of Cincinnati Are Innovating And Generating Economic Growth.
It’s easy to get pessimistic in this holiday season as major institutions in our lives, especially the financial institutions, break our trust. But we shouldn’t despair. I recently visited two senior design/innovation classes in Cincinnati and New York where the students were so wonderfully brilliant that my own personal gloom was lifted and replaced by hope.
NussbaumOnDesign
NussbaumOnDesign
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Feelin' Muji
Anonymity is an odd thing for a brand to strive for, but not if you are a "no brand" brand. The goal of Yasui's team is to define Muji by design: to create and refine products toward ultimate simplicity and functionality. Muji is characterized by neutral tones and a bare-bones chic infused into everything from food to beds to bicycles--even a house. Muji ("no mark" in Japanese) screams minimalism to anyone who has entered one of its 433 locations in 16 countries.
Time Magazine
Time Magazine
Friday, December 12, 2008
Red Sox unveil new club logos and uniforms
The Red Sox will wear a new gray primary road uniform. These “retro roadies” will feature the word “BOSTON” in blue lettering across the chest and will include a “Hanging Sox” patch on the left sleeve. The new alternate road uniform will be a combination of gray pants and blue jersey with “BOSTON” in red lettering across the chest. Both the home and road alternate uniforms will now feature new alternate “Hanging Sox” logo hats. No changes have been made to the primary home uniform.
boston.com
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Monday, December 01, 2008
P&G Tries Again with Pantene
The campaign is the latest attempt to jump-start the brand, which has repeatedly been singled out as a laggard in P&G's North American beauty business. Most recently, Pantene was blamed for making P&G miss the usual 5% annual beauty growth mark. In an earnings call with analysts this April, CEO A.G. Lafley attributed much of that decline to last spring's failed restaging of the brand. Called Parthenon, that campaign, also via Grey, New York, called for organizing the brand's many SKUs into 18 easily identifiable "benefit-themed" collections, including ones for healthy, colored and treated hair. Aimed at minimizing the confusion, the strategy ultimately failed.
BrandWeek
BrandWeek
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)