About Me

I’m a product strategist and writer. In my day job, I’m a Creative Director at frog design. I also write for Cnet on the Matter/Anti-Matter blog. This is my personal blog and does not represent the views of frog or Cnet.

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Entries in brand (2)

Monday
18May2009

Speaking at Sustainable Brands Conference

Myself and a couple of colleagues — Sara Louise Todd and Mary Anne Masterston — will be running a workshop as part of the Sustainable Brands Conference in Monterey, CA, in early June. The line-up of speakers is impressive, including frog’s own Robert Fabricant talking about Project M. If you’re into this area and are in the fortunate position of having a travel/conference budget, it should be a good conference.

They haven’t updated the workshop description yet from the original one we sent them before we’d finalized the workshop agenda, so here are more details. Our workshop is coming at the end of the conference, so we are using as an opportunity to help people frame the ideas they’ve been hearing/thinking about into something actionable:

What do you do on Monday morning?

How do you convert the ideas and examples you’ve been hearing about in the previous days into action in your own organization? How do you synthesize everything you’ve absorbed into something comprehensive and meaningful to your company? How does what you’ve learned this week apply directly to your company’s long-term goals?

Using our frogThinkTM creative work session methods, we’ll take you through a series of activities that will assist you in applying your inspired energy from the week into actionable goals. This will be a high energy, hands-on, collaborative workshop, out of which you will get a distilled set of ideas and next steps, written down in a form to be easily shared with others on Monday morning.

Using a series of provocations we will help you explore the long-term positioning of your brand. Next we will provide approaches to define the first steps in getting you there, acknowledging the challenging economic client in the near-term. Activities will be team-based, but your take-a-ways will be focused directly on your individual needs and circumstance.

Tuesday
16Dec2008

Brand Consulting Disruption

I’ve been thinking quite a bit recently about the divergent nature of so many companies: one company finds itself under threat from completely unexpected quarters as those other companies diverge out of their established domains. (I prefer Gary Hamel’s word “domain” rather than industry because, as he points out, the boundaries are so blurry today that thinking in terms of industry or category is falsely comforting and limiting.) This one is a doosey: Zappos is going into the brand consulting business.

Adweek writes:

Over the past few years, executives from dozens of companies, including Southwest Airlines and Best Buy, as well as ordinary customers, have made the trek to see its operations up close. The tour has undeniable Zappos touches: each department has its own greeting, and in-house motivational guru Dr. Vik has visitors sit in a throne for a Polaroid snapshot.

Now the company hopes to turn the intense interest in its culture and approach to business into a moneymaker. This week, it plans to roll out Zappos Insights, a subscription video service that lets companies ask questions about the Zappos way and get answers from actual Zappos employees. It will charge $39.95 per month for subscriptions.

The Zappos Insights site is up, but is mostly locked down for subscribers. About the only thing I could find public is the reading list. Overall things look pretty sparse, and they don’t have much preview material so you can get a sense of what you’re paying $39.95 a month for, or how well their Zappos-centric experiences scale to other businesses. But if it’s like buying shoes from Zappos they’ll have a pretty flexible subscription policy so you can try it out without much risk.

Still, who would have thought that brand agencies would find themselves competing against a shoe retailer? Sure, Zappos advice is not going to be tailored in the same way, but heck it’s several zeroes cheaper and for the “Fortune One Million” size companies they are targeting, something adequate is better than nothing. And that’s the very definition of a disruptive play.

Read more >

Hat tip: Steve Portigal