Category Archives: New Products

Tips from the Top

Three CEO marketing leadership examples stood out to me recently.  Ponder the meaning and implications from 3M, Wal-Mart and United Continental for your team and company.

Photo: 3M

Singles and Doubles Win Games Too

Sometimes the desire for the new product home run obscures the ability to win by stringing together lots of hits.  From innovation superstar 3M, we’re reminded that a series of smaller, yet profitable new product introductions can also lead to company growth.  Sure, there needs to be an understanding about benchmarks and hurdles.  And, yes, the opportunity costs to execute against new product launches need to be carefully considered.  If you can get the home run, great.  If you can’t, don’t rule out the singles and doubles, though.   

“3M is everywhere. That’s the point George Buckley, the chairman and CEO of 3M, is trying to make as he talks about his favorite subject, inventing things. Last year, he says, “even in the worst economic times in memory, we released over 1,000 new products.”

But 3M has never been about inventing the Next Big Thing. It’s about inventing hundreds and hundreds of Next Small Things, year after year.”

3M’s Innovation Revival - Fortune – September 24, 2010

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Back To The Future Marketing

One of the great things about marketing is that new ideas don’t always have to be new.

The Food Network’s Unwrapped show just featured a coin-operated eating blast from the past.  Taking a page from Horn & Hardart history, the founders of BAMN! Automat created a hip eating place for fresh food that’s fast and tasty. 

Visit BAMN! in this video.

Open 24 hours a day, the downtown New York City eatery features a range of foods and desserts costing only a few dollars each.  “Hearty comfort food choices – at vintage prices” is how the company puts it.  Especially intriguing is that all the food is prepared fresh and on-site by a chef!  Two of the healthy chicken items (red bamboo soul chicken and chicken parmigiana) cost $3 each and are made from soy.  Have a craving for Mexican?  Try the tijuana taco kroket for $2.  Check out the menu here. 

Open for three years now, the BAMN! concept and positioning target fast-movers in an urban environment:  “we offer tasty and high quality food to fuel people on the go.”  Don’t forget to bring your quarters, though.  Similar to its historical predecessor, you’ll need coins to quench your hunger. 

Headline For Marketers:  Inspiration doesn’t always require fancy trendspotters or high-priced idea-generators.  Winning ideas can come from many places, including the past.  Dare to be different as you provide the customer with quality and value, and a little fun never hurts either.  For those managing established brands or businesses, especially with a rich heritage, be sure to review the archives and understand what led to success or what may have been before its time.  There may be a great idea to repurpose.  Overall, challenge yourself and your teams to find creative ways to manufacture news and maintain relevancy.

Harvey Chimoff is a cross-functional marketing leader who leverages a special blend of pragmatic strategy, vision, organization, and action to achieve marketing and business results.  Click here for more information or contact Harvey at hchimoff@gmail.com.       

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BoltBus Provides A Branding Ticket To Ride

Advertising Age magazine just named BoltBus one of “America’s Hottest Brands.”

Not knowing who this company was or why it was so hot, I had to investigate.

First, some background.  In March 2008, BoltBus was launched in the Northeast United States, and currently operates roundtrip service to New York City or Washington, D.C. via four markets:  New York City, Boston, Philadelphia (including Cherry Hill, NJ) and Washington, D.C. (including Greenbelt, MD).  BoltBus, headquartered in Secaucus, N.J., is a division of Greyhound Lines, Inc., operated in affiliation with Peter Pan Bus Lines.

Apparently, Greyhound’s objective was to target urban professionals, college students and commuters traveling on the popular Northeast corridor, and to penetrate a segment of the market known as “Chinatown buses” (provide curbside service from one city’s Chinatown district to another). 

Here’s what’s interesting about BoltBus from a marketing perspective:

  • In order to jettison any Greyhound “baggage” that might prevent the success of the new enterprise, the company created a new brand;
  • To reduce operating costs associated with being located in city bus terminals (building and labor overhead), BoltBus adopted a curbside pick-up service model.  In other words, the bus stops at designated street locations similar to intra-city bus service;  
  • BoltBus offers free wireless internet access and seat-back electrical outlets, perfect for today’s connected travelers, plus extra leg room;
  • BoltBus has a unique pricing scheme, in which seats start as low as $1 and then are priced according to demand;
  • You can order your tickets in advance on-line, or buy them right at the bus;
  • There’s a frequent traveler, loyalty program.

Greyhound used California ad agency Butler Shine Stern & Partners to help create the new BoltBus brand.  For the marketing launch, BoltBus worked with key, urban bloggers and utilized media relations outreach to create awareness and demand.

Headline For Marketers:  Brand extension is over-used.  Don’t be afraid to create a new brand if your new product or service has a different target and positioning. Yes, it’s more expensive to launch a new brand than to piggy-back on the current brand, but the idea is to be successful and win in the market, not to save money.  Remember to make sure you fully evaluate branding options when you start your next new product development project.

Blogger Harvey Chimoff, a cross-functional marketing leader, relies on a special blend of pragmatic strategy, vision, organization, and action to achieve marketing and business results.  Click here for more information or contact Harvey at hchimoff@gmail.com.   

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Power Positioning

Just about everyone has heard the expression “knowledge is power.”  Given the proliferation of and sometimes utter dependence on handheld devices containing life’s precious information, maybe “power is power” reigns supreme today.

So, it’s interesting to see that portable power maker Duracell has a new strategic platform to position itself beyond just batteries.  Duracell, part of Procter & Gamble, recently organized a suite of existing and new products under the Duracell Smart Power platform.

This new print ad caught my attention.  

Duracell Print Ad

FORTUNE - October 26, 2009

Smart Power builds on the Duracell brand strength and easily pushes the well-known brand further into the portable power/portable recharging sector.  It  “expands the brand’s product portfolio beyond the traditional battery to address the ever-growing and ever-changing power needs of the modern consumer,” according to the company.

Duracell has five product lines positioned under Smart Power:

  1. CopperTop batteries
  2. Daylite family of flashlights – five new models
  3. Portable backup power devices – three new products
  4. Rechargeable family including chargers and batteries
  5. Charging grid

Sure, the batteries aren’t new and rechargeable battery kits have been around for a long time, as have flashlights.  Duracell claims benefits, though.  The company’s Web site states that “with a fast one-hour charge and a car adaptor, you can charge four AA or AAA batteries at home or on the go in no time.”

What really brings the Smart Power concept to life are the charging grid and the portable backup power devices.  You may have seen a tv commercial for Powermat and Duracell will compete in this space too.  In addition to the charging grid, there are three products that can provide reserve power for “popular mobile devices, such as  BlackBerrys, iPods and cellphones that come with USB power cords:”  Duracell Instant Charger, Duracell Powerhouse Charger, and Duracell Pocket Charger.

Duracell doesn’t want you to ever run out of power for your  indispensable handheld.  Here’s an idea as the marketing campaign evolves.  Maybe Duracell should ask American Express if they can use their famous “Don’t leave home without it” tagline, which is a concept that meshes nicely with Duracell’s new positioning and products.

Headline For Marketers:  Developing and executing positioning strategy and tactics that really work is perhaps the hardest job in marketing.  Duracell has come up with a positioning strategy that provides a strong platform for its existing products and a seamless, yet powerful transition into new product segments.

Blogger Harvey Chimoff, a cross-functional marketing leader, relies on a special blend of pragmatic strategy, vision, organization, and action to achieve marketing and business results.  Go to the ”About” page at the top of this blog for more information.  Contact Harvey at hchimoff@gmail.com.   

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